World War I brings tribulations to an American woman married to a German.World War I brings tribulations to an American woman married to a German.World War I brings tribulations to an American woman married to a German.
Ronnie Cosby
- Teddy 'Sonny' Wilbrandt
- (as Ronnie Crosby)
Elizabeth Patterson
- Clara Tuttle--Canteen Worker
- (credit only)
Ethel Wales
- Miss Honeywell--Canteen Worker
- (credit only)
Donald Meek
- Storekeeper
- (scenes deleted)
Wallis Clark
- Enoch Sewell
- (uncredited)
George Cooper
- Lefty--Soldier
- (uncredited)
Claire Du Brey
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAn early example in a long line of films where the character played by Ralph Bellamy is the second romantic lead and loses or doesn't get the girl.
- SoundtracksDu, Du Liegst Mir im Herzen
(uncredited)
Traditional German folksong
Played during the opening credits and often as background music
Played on piano and sung by Otto Kruger
Words reprised often
Featured review
Barbara Stanwyck and Otto Kruger star in "Ever in My Heart," a 1933 film directed by Archie Mayo and also starring Ralph Bellamy.
Stanwyck plays Mary Archer, who, in 1909, falls in love with a young German, Hugo Wilbrandt (Otto Kruger), a friend of her cousin Jeff (Ralph Bellamy). They get married right away and settle down, and eventually have a baby boy. Hugo proudly becomes an American citizen.
Tragedy strikes the couple. When World War I occurs, the anti-German sentiment forces Hugo out of his teaching job and unable to find any other work. Mary's family wants them to move back in with them, but they want Hugo to change his name, which he won't do. He talks Mary into staying with them, saying he will join her in a week. He doesn't; he turns his back on America and returns to Germany to fight the war with the Germans.
Mary divorces Hugo and later goes overseas to work for the war effort. There, she runs into Hugo.
I knew the plot of this film, but there were elements of it that I did not know, so I found the film even more profoundly depressing than I expected. Barbara Stanwyck is wonderful, going from a fresh, young, happy woman to one who has to endure horrible sadness. Otto Kruger is very effective as well, but this is really Stanwyck's film. She'll break your heart.
Beautifully done film, but be prepared!
Stanwyck plays Mary Archer, who, in 1909, falls in love with a young German, Hugo Wilbrandt (Otto Kruger), a friend of her cousin Jeff (Ralph Bellamy). They get married right away and settle down, and eventually have a baby boy. Hugo proudly becomes an American citizen.
Tragedy strikes the couple. When World War I occurs, the anti-German sentiment forces Hugo out of his teaching job and unable to find any other work. Mary's family wants them to move back in with them, but they want Hugo to change his name, which he won't do. He talks Mary into staying with them, saying he will join her in a week. He doesn't; he turns his back on America and returns to Germany to fight the war with the Germans.
Mary divorces Hugo and later goes overseas to work for the war effort. There, she runs into Hugo.
I knew the plot of this film, but there were elements of it that I did not know, so I found the film even more profoundly depressing than I expected. Barbara Stanwyck is wonderful, going from a fresh, young, happy woman to one who has to endure horrible sadness. Otto Kruger is very effective as well, but this is really Stanwyck's film. She'll break your heart.
Beautifully done film, but be prepared!
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $243,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 8 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content