Notes
1. “Film Epic Thrills Audiences,” Deseret News, 23 August 1940, 6.
2. See James V. D’Arc, “When Hollywood & Vine Met at Temple Square,” Mountainwest 5 (April 1979): 31–33, 35.
3. M. R. Werner, “Brigham Young Seen as Screen Material,” New York Herald Tribune, 15 September 1940, sec. 6, p. 10. Werner’s biography Brigham Young (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1925) was the only significant non-Mormon biography of the Mormon church president and was consulted by Twentieth Century-Fox writers in researching the film.
4. “The motion picture Brigham Young pictured President Young wondering if he was called of God. The picture showed him vacillating, unsure, and questioning his calling. In the climax of the play he is shown wavering, ready to admit he had not been inspired, that he had lied to them and misled them. . . . But there was nothing vacillating or weak about Brigham Young. He knew he was God’s leader” (Spencer W. Kimball, Faith Precedes the Miracle [Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co., 1975]. 29).
5. See Garth Jowett, Film: The Democratic Art (Boston: Little, Brown, 1975), 109–82, for a lengthy discussion on attempts at motion picture censorship beginning in the early 1900s; pages 233–56 cover the establishment of the Production Code, the Catholic Church’s Legion of Decency, and various state censorship boards. Jack Vizzard, See No Evil: Life inside a Hollywood Censor (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1970), is an informative personal account of a member of the Production Code board; see also Murray Schumach, The Face on the Cutting Room Floor (New York: William Morrow, 1964).
6. Arthur Schlesinger Jr., “When the Movies Really Counted,” Show (April 1973): 77.
7. Warren I. Susman, “The Thirties,” in The Development of an American Culture, ed. Stanley Cohen and Lorman Ratnet (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall, 1970), 192–93. The make-up of the movie audience that supported the Production Code and the institutionalized goals of Roosevelt’s New Deal is described in Ralph A. Brauer, “When the Lights Went Out—Hollywood, the Depression, and the Thirties,” in Movies as Artifacts: Cultural Criticism of Popular Film, ed. Michael Marsden, Jack Nachbar, and Sam Grogg (Chicago: Nelson Hall, 1982), 25–43.
8. See Richard Alan Nelson, “A History of Latter-day Saint Screen Portrayals in the Anti-Mormon Film Era, 1905–1936” (Master’s thesis, Brigham Young University, 1975), 221–31, on President Grant’s correspondence to Senator Reed Smoot concerning Trapped by the Mormons as an example of his concern over public images of Mormons through motion pictures.
9. Ibid. Many of the findings in Nelson’s thesis were condensed with additional information on sound-era portrayals on film and television into Richard Alan Nelson, “From Antagonism to Acceptance: Mormons and the Silver Screen,” Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 10 (Spring 1977): 58–69.
10. See James V. D’Arc, “The Way We Were,” This People 6 (August–September 1985): 44–45; and James V. D’Arc, “The Mormon as Vampire: A Comparative Study of Winifred Graham’s The Love Story of a Mormon, the Film Trapped by the Mormons, and Bram Stoker’s Dracula” (Paper delivered at the Mormon History Association meeting, Oxford, England, 9 July 1987) [published in BYU Studies 46, no. 2 (2007): 164–87].
11. “No film or episode may throw ridicule on any religious faith. Ministers of religion in their character as ministers of religion should not be used as comic characters or as villains. Ceremonies of any definite religion should be carefully and respectfully handled” (Production Code, as reprinted in Vizzard, See No Evil, 370).
12. The files of the Production Code Administration reveal that in 1935 Joseph I. Breen, head of the administration, met with representatives of Universal Pictures to discuss their idea for a film about Brigham Young and the Mormon trek to Utah. The studio representative was “particularly insistent that the story he had in mind would have about it no suggestion of loose sex, lovemaking, or marriage-making.” Breen expressed no concern “except the natural difficulty which readily presents itself and which, of course has to do with the question of polygamy.” Also, the “sensitiveness of the Mormon Church communicants” to such a film must be dealt with by a studio making the picture. The studio representatives claimed to have engaged one Harvey Gage “a great-grandson of Brigham Young . . . whose mother is now the official archivist of the Mormon Church” to write the screenplay. Apparently, Universal went no further than preliminary discussions with their plans for a feature film on the Mormons (see Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America, Inc., Production Code Administration File, Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences Library, Beverly Hills, California). Columnist May Mann reported another apparently abandoned film project by Hollywood producer E. B. Derr that was to have begun in 1937. She also reported that Cecil B. DeMille, Paramount, and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer had been interested in doing a film on the Mormons but “the present need is for concentrated action” (May Mann, “Events in Mormon Pioneering of Salt Lake Will Be Chronicled in Hollywood Production,” Deseret News, 26 December 1936, 3).
13. “Polygamy is considered as multiple adultery under the Code, and, therefore any story dealing with this theme must have sufficient compensating moral values to permit its dramatization on the screen. It may not be treated in a favorable or glamorous light, and no details of the intimate life of a colony devoted to polygamy may be portrayed on the screen. It must be shown as illegal, wrong, and subversive of the standards of a Christian society” (Olga J. Martin, Hollywood’s Movie Commandments: A Handbook for Motion Picture Writer’s and Reviewers [New York: H. W. Wilson, 1937 ], 174).
14. Douglas W. Churchill, “Hollywood Goes Historical,” New York Times Magazine, 4 August 1940, 22. “Hollywood’s current preoccupation with American history springs partly from a nationwide resurgence of patriotism (which in turn springs from U.S. revulsion at events in Europe), partly from realization that Americans enjoy pictures based on fact” (“Dodge City Has Dodge City Premier That Dazzles Kansas and Half the West,” Life 6 [17 April 1939]: 68). This article also discusses the success of screen biographies of historical figures and reports that films on the life of Abraham Lincoln and Brigham Young were in production.
15. “Liberalizing the Screen,” Variety, 13 March 1940, 3. All citations to Variety unless otherwise stated are to the New York City edition.
16. Churchill, “Hollywood Goes Historical,” 7, 22. In an assessment of historically oriented feature films up to that time (1940), Churchill concluded that “[i]n the main, the films are focused on the great man, the individual who stands at the crux of historical events.” Then he listed three traits common to nearly all of these films: “Many of the directors hold that in a biographical film details are inconsequential as long as the spirit and purpose of a man’s life are faithfully articulated. Secondly there are numerous external pressures [relatives, special interest groups, descendants of famous figures] who bring the luckless producers into court on the flimsiest provocations. Finally there is the necessity of catering to the popular concept of history. . . . The public wants the objects of its adoration and veneration to be shown as heroic.” In the case of Brigham Young, all the above factors were strictly met.
17. Darryl F. Zanuck to William Dover, Memorandum, 8 September 1938, Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation Archives, Beverly Hills, California (hereafter cited as Fox Archives).
18. Julian Johnson [head of Fox’s story department] to Kenneth Macgowan [associate producer on Brigham Young], Memorandum, 8 March 1939, Fox Archives. See also Eleanor Harris v. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (1942), Civil 10-221, Deposition of Darryl F. Zanuck, 19 August 1941, Beverly Hills, California, 11–12. All documents herein cited in the court case are located in the Federal Archives and Records Center, Building 22-MOT, Bayonne, New Jersey.
19. Kenneth Macgowan to Darryl F. Zanuck, Memorandum, 22 March 1939, Fox Archives. Macgowan also claimed that Woolley had written a six-thousand-word pamphlet for the Salt Lake City Chamber of Commerce on Mormon history and “knows a lot [about Mormon history] that hasn’t made its way into books.”
20. Darryl F. Zanuck to Kenneth Macgowan, Memorandum, 22 April 1939, Fox Archives. The treatment by writers Eleanor Griffin and William Rankin described by Zanuck in the memo as “amazingly well thought out” was not among the documents in the Fox studio collection. Zanuck in the same memo also indicated that top Fox scriptwriter Lamar Trotti would be assigned to Brigham Young after completing work on his current project, Drums along the Mowhawk, directed by John Ford, which was subsequently released in late 1939. Both The Story of Alexander Graham Bell (1939) and Jesse James (1939) were produced and released by Twentieth Century-Fox.
21. Heber J. Grant to Sidney R. Kent, 22 March 1939, typescript, Fox Archives.
22. Heber J. Grant to Will H. Hays, 22 March 1939, typescript, Fox Archives.
23. Will H. Hays to Heber J. Grant, 27 March 1939, typescript, Fox Archives.
24. Other films adapted from Bromfield’s novels were One Heavenly Night (United Artists, 1931), Night after Night (Paramount, 1932), The Life of Virgie Winters (RKO, 1934), It All Came True (Warners, 1940), and Mrs. Parkington (MGM, 1944). See David D. Anderson, Louis Bromfield (New York: Twayne, 1964); Morris Brown, Louis Bromfield and His Books (Fair Lawn, N.J.: Essential Books, 1957): John Bainbridge, “Farmer Bromfield: Famous Novelist Preaches the New Agriculture on His Malabar Farm,” Life 25 (11 October 1948): 111–22.
25. Alfred Kazin, “Our Last Authentic Frontier Novelist,” New York Herald Tribune Book Review, 27 August 1939, 3.
26. Joseph M. Flora, Vardis Fisher (New York: Twayne, 1965), 132.
27. Carl Van Doren, The American Novel 1789–1939, rev. and enl. (New York: Macmillan, 1940), 363.
28. David Brion Davis, “Children of God: An Historian’s Evaluation,” Western Humanities Review 8 (Winter 1953–54): 49–56. Robert A. Rees noted the criticism received of many novelists who wrote on Mormon historical themes, including Fisher, but explained through an example from Children of God how convincingly a good novelist can dramatize oftentimes plodding history as frequently written by professional historians (“‘Truth Is the Daughter of Time’: Notes toward an Imaginative Mormon History,” Dialogue 6 [Autumn–Winter 1971]: 19–22).
29. John A. Widtsoe to Kenneth Macgowan, 7 September 1939, Kenneth Macgowan Collection, University of California at Los Angeles (hereafter cited as Macgowan Collection).
30. Heber J. Grant, Journal, 26 August 1939, typescript, 139, Library-Archives, Historical Department, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Salt Lake City (hereafter cited as LDS Church Archives).
31. Heber J. Grant to Charles Zimmerman, 22 October 1939, typescript, in Heber J. Grant, Journal, 183.
32. Heber J. Grant, Journal, 27 October 1939, 198–99. There is no record of what the “slight changes” were.
33. Heber J. Grant, Journal, 9 January 1940, 6.
34. John A. Widtsoe to Lamar Trotti, 13 November 1939, 3–4, Macgowan Collection.
35. Weston Nordgren, Liahona: The Elders’ Journal, 9 July 1940, 55. Nordgren also wrote a favorable article about the upcoming film in the Church’s official magazine (Weston Nordgren, “Brigham Young,” Improvement Era 43 [November 1940]: 532–33, 547).
36. While director Henry Hathaway pasted pages from Children of God in his shooting script for atmosphere, the only similarities between the finished film and Fisher’s novel “were in the way of dialogue” (Kenneth Macgowan to Harry Brand, Memorandum, 30 April 1940, Fox Archives). Also, according to George Wasson, one of the assistant secretaries at Fox, Macgowan’s feelings were that “[i]f we were to look at this picture with an unbiased view I am certain that we would find the present story entirely historical in background, which contributes 50% of the story, probably 5% Eleanor Harris, 5% dialogue from Vardis Fisher’s Children of God, 5% Louis Bromfield, 5% Henry Hathaway’s directoral changes, and 30% Lamar Trotti’s story development” (George Wasson to Edwin P. Kilroe, Memorandum, 21 August 1940, Fox Archives). See also Henry Hathaway’s shooting script for Brigham Young in Henry Hathaway Collection, American Film Institute, Louis B. Mayer Library, Hollywood, California; and Henry Hathaway interview by James V. D’Arc, 9 July 1983, Los Angeles, California, in author’s possession.
37. As quoted in G. Homer Durham to James D’Arc, 28 September 1979, letter in author’s possession. Durham, at the time of writing the letter, was managing director of the Church Historical Department. The Widtsoe Papers remain closed, but Elder Durham quoted the passages dealing with the Bromfield-Widtsoe trip from Widtsoe’s diary from April–June 1939.
38. See James V. D’Arc, “The Saints on Celluloid: The Making of the Movie Brigham Young,” Sunstone 1 (Fall 1976): 11–28, for a production history of the film.
39. See Mary Astor, A Life on Film (New York: Delacorte Press, 1971), 147. The Twentieth Century-Fox publicity department also chose, in addition to adding “Frontiersman” to the title, to attract Eastern audiences to the film by dealing with their perceived preoccupation with Brigham Young’s many wives. It also favorably compared Brigham Young with other well-known western epic films The Covered Wagon (1923), The Iron Horse (1924), and Cimarron (1930), the only western film to receive an Academy Award. The advertising mat illustrated here is from a studio-generated “campaign manual” or pressbook sent to newspaper editors and theatre owners. These “camera ready” advertising mats were then used in local newspapers to advertise the film. This advertisement appeared in the New York Times.
40. Time 37 (7 October 1940): 63.
41. “High L.D.S. Officials Preview ‘Brigham Young,’” Salt Lake Tribune, 14 August 1940, 8.
42. Los Angeles Times, 21 August 1940. In Mary Astor, Scrapbook, Archives and Manuscripts, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah (hereafter cited as Mary Astor Scrapbook).
43. Los Angeles Examiner, 21 August 1940, in Mary Astor Scrapbook.
44. Virginia Wright, Los Angeles Daily News, n.d., Mary Astor Scrapbook.
45. Bosley Crowther, New York Times, 21 September 1940, Mary Astor Scrapbook. Crowther expanded on his desire to see more polygamy in Brigham Youngwhen he wrote a feature article on historical films. He admitted that there was an almost inherent dilemma in such motion pictures, for “when a picture does strive to make a more adult point [beyond textbook platitudes], the effort is likely to lead to a dissipation of dramatic values. . . . A shade less Brigham and a shade more Brighamy would have made for a livelier picture.” Crowther admired the efforts made by the producers of The Howards of Virginia (Columbia, 1940) and Abe Lincoln in Illinois (RKO, 1940), but was disappointed with Brigham Young and Gone with the Wind (Selznick-MGM, 1939) (see Bosley Crowther, “The American Ideal: How Profound Is the Effect of Filmed History on the Popular Mind?” New York Times, 29 September 1940, sec. 10, p. 3).
46. Review, New York City Film Daily, 27 August 1940, Mary Astor Scrapbook.
47. Review, Silver Screen, November 1940, 98, Mary Astor Scrapbook.
48. Time 37 (7 October 1940): 63; Newsweek 18 (23 September 1940): 151; Life 9 (23 September 1940): 59.
49. “Kate Smith’s Radio Tieups for ‘Rockne’ and ‘Brigham Young,’” Variety, 11 September 1940.
50. A sizable portion of the highly publicized budget of two-and-a-half-million dollars for Brigham Young went to advertising to “compensate for the loss of numerous foreign markets by pulling greater attendance in this country,” as noted in “Advertising News & Notes,” New York Times, 20 April 1940, 22. However, in the spring of 1941 the film was released in England. It was initially feared by the British Board of Film Censors that it might be “pro-Mormon propaganda,” but it ultimately passed with few cuts and received essentially favorable reviews (James C. Robertson, The British Board of Film Censors: Film Censorship in Britain, 1896–1950 [London: Croom Helm, 1985]: 76); also “Mormon Trek Impresses British: Screen Story of Brigham Young Is Cause for Commend in English Press,” Deseret News, 10 May 1941. As of 15 May 1940, the following areas were totally “frozen” out of film distribution: Japan, Korea, France, Spain, Sweden, Norway, Manchukuo. Those “50% frozen” were England, Scotland, and Australia. Partially frozen, interpreted to mean very little, if any, distribution: Germany, Poland, and Rumania. Most of Africa, Saudi Arabia, lran, India, Afghanistan, and China were unrestricted. The trade paper cautioned exhibitors, however, that where Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg were concerned “overnight events make the situation doubtful [for continued distribution to those areas]” (“Restricted Film Markets Chart,” Variety, 15 May 1940, 8). Foreign markets accounted for up to 35 or 40 percent of a given film’s total gross income.
51. Variety, 11 September 1940, 8; 18 September 1940; 2 October 1940, 11; 25 September 1940, 10, 11.
52. Variety, 2 October 1940, 9; 25 September 1940, 10.
53. Variety, 25 September 1940, 9, 10; 2 October 1940, 9; 18 September 1940, 11.
54. “Brigham Young—Frontiersman was one Tyrone Power epic which flopped, much to Zanuck’s disappointment” (Aubrey Solomon, “A Corporate and Financial History of the 20th Century-Fox Studio” [Beverly Hills, Calif.: American Film Institute Center for Advanced Film Studies, 1975], 78–79). Tony Thomas and Aubrey Solomon, The Films of Twentieth Century-Fox: A Pictorial History (Secaucus, N.J.: Citadel Press, 1979), 18; Dennis Belfonte with Alvin H. Marill, The Films of Tyrone Power (Secaucus. N.J.: Citadel Press, 1980), 20.
55. Maynard Smith, “A Survey of the Screenplays Written by Lamar Trotti with Emphasis on Their Acceptance by Professional and Non-Professional Groups” (Master’s thesis, University of Southern California, 1953), 265. Smith recorded that he had access to the Financial statements of Twentieth Century-Fox and the company’s treasurer, Fred L. Metzler. Total receipts for Brigham Young: $4,294,500, against a cost of $1,485,050.17, that more than paid expenses of production and distribution. Smith, in a telephone interview with the author on 10 June 1986, confirmed that he had personally seen the financial records at the behest of Mr. Trotti and with the cooperation of Mr. Metzler. Press claims, and even studio press releases, consistently maintained that the budget was $2,500,000, but in view of studio budget sheets, such figures were another example of the studio’s overworked publicity department.
56. Fred Johnson, “A Mormon Eyes ‘Brigham Young’,” San Francisco Call-Bulletin, 5 October 1940, Mary Astor Scrapbook.
57. Lamar Trotti, from the story by Louis Bromfield, “Brigham Young” unpublished screenplay (Beverly Hills, Calif.: Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, n.d.. but probably 13 April 1940 shooting final), 44.
58. Ibid., 50.
59. Ibid., 88.
60. Heber J. Grant, “Gratitude for Faith of People,” in Conference Report, October 1940, 96. Added emphasis was given to President Grant’s concern as this address was reprinted on the “Editor’s Page” of the Church’s official magazine, the Improvement Era 43 (November 1940): 654.
61. Frank W. Fox, J. Reuben Clark: The Public Years (Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University Press and Deseret Book Co., 1980), 443.
62. Thomas G. Alexander, Mormomism in Transition: A History of the Latter-day Saints, 1890–1930 (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1986), 308.
63. Dennis Leo Lythgoe, “The Changing Image of Mormonism in Periodical Literature” (Ph.D. diss., University of Utah, 1969), 177–86, covers the treatment of the Church welfare program in national publications. See also Richard O. Cowan, “Gentile Attitudes towards Mormons, 1890–1947” (Master’s thesis, University of Wyoming, 1960). For a Mormon perspective on the Church welfare plan and the Church operations during the 1930s, see James B. Allen and Glen M. Leonard, The Story of the Latter-day Saints (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co., 1976), 515–34: and Leonard J. Arrington and Wayne K. Hinton, “Origin of the Mormon Welfare Plan,” Brigham Young University Studies 5 (Winter 1964): 67–85. For a critical evaluation from a non-Mormon perspective, see Robert Gottlieb and Peter Wiley, America’s Saints: The Rise of Mormon Power (New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1984), 70–71, and John Heinerman and Anson Shupe, The Mormon Corporate Empire (Boston: Beacon Press, 1985), 180–95.
64. American Weekly, 16 June–1 September 1940.
65. Heber J. Grant to Kenneth Macgowan, 30 August 1939, Macgowan Collection.
66. John A. Widtsoe to Kenneth Macgowan, 13 November 1939, Macgowan Collection.
67. In proposing this treatment, Bromfield admitted that this would be historically inaccurate but declared, “but the Church officials [who would have been President Grant and Elder Widtsoe primarily] are in favor of adapting history and putting it in here” (Louis Bromfield with the collaboration of Eleanor Harris and James Woolley, Brigham Young, 26 July 1939, Treatment, 148).
68. Reported by Thomas Brady, “Profits vs. Prestige,” New York Times, 28 July 1940, sec. 9, p. 3.
69. Eleanor Harris v. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, Deposition of Lamar Trotti, 20 August 1941, Beverly Hills, California, 14 (emphasis added).
70. Eleanor Harris v. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, Deposition of Louis Bromfield, 29 August 1940, as quoted in Deposition of Louis Bromfield, 23 October 1941, New York, 2. Harris lost her suit, which sought equal credit with Bromfield for the film’s story rather than the “Story Research” credit given her by the studio on the film’s release prints (see Eleanor Harris v. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, Civil 10-221, 2 January 1942, decision rendered by Henry W. Goddard, District Judge, United States District Court Southern District of New York).
71. Eleanor Harris v. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, Deposition of Darryl F. Zanuck, 19 August 1941, Beverly Hills, Califomia, 23–24.
72. M. R. Werner, “Brigham Young Seen as Screen Material,” New York Herald Tribune, 15 September 1940, sec. 6, p. 10.
73. Vardis Fisher to Elizabeth Nowell, 5 June 1939, typescript copy in Fox Archives. Zanuck did not retain Fisher (even in an anonymous capacity) because “Louis Bromfield has been spending a great deal of time with President Grant, the present head of the Mormon Church, and the Mormon Church has already supplied us with several technical advisors that they feel will do a good job for us and I cannot, at this late date, start bringing in another one” (Darryl F. Zanuck to Julian Johnson, Memorandum, 8 June 1939, Fox Archives).
74. Morrison Brown, Louis Bromfield and His Books (Fair Lawn, N.J .: Essential Books, 1957), 90. Prior to the film’s release, Bromfield remarked to a reporter, “I just couldn’t resist having a chance to say my say about old Brigham Young who, in my mind, was one of the most heroic of American figures” (Grace Wilcox, “Nothing Grew Except Courage,” Detroit Free-Press, 4 August 1940).
75. Alma Rothe, ed., Current Biography 1944 (New York: H. W. Wilson, 1945), 68. The response by other Hollywood studios to the growing awareness of fascism both foreign and domestic is discussed in Peter Roffman and Jim Purdy, The Hollywood Social Problem Film (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1981), 200–23.
76. Eleanor Harris to Kenneth Macgowan, Memorandum, 30 March 1938, Fox Archives.
77. Leonard Mosely, Zanuck: The Rise and Fall of Hollywood’s Last Tycoon (Boston: Little, 1948), 140–41. See also Tom Stempel, Screen Writer: Nunnally Johnson (San Diego: A. S., 1980), 47–50.
78. Brigham Young, “Memorandum of Discussion with Mr. Zanuck,” 22 March 1939, 1, Fox Archives.
79. Lamar Trotti was responsible for many successful films for Twentieth Century-Fox, whether working in collaboration or alone. His impressive credits include In Old Chicago (1938), Young Mr. Lincoln (1939), The Ox-Bow Incident (also as coproducer, 1943), and The Razor’s Edge (1946). Maynard Smith’s 1953 master’s thesis is the only extensive study of Trotti and his film works; see also Maynard Terebo Smith, “Lamar Trotti,” in Dictionary of Literary Biography, ed. Randall Clark, in vol. 44 of American Screenwriters (Detroit: Gale Research, 1986), 392–99.
80. Trolli, “Brigham Young,” 26–27.
81. “Brigham Young Hit Film of Adventure,” San Francisco Call Bulletin, 27 September 1940.
82. “Mormon Epic Fills Vast Canvas in Brigham Young,” Los Angeles Times, n.d., Mary Astor Scrapbook.
83. Motion Picture Reviews 15 (September 1940): 3.
84. Dallin H. Oaks and Marvin S. Hill, Carthage Conspiracy: The Trial of the Accused Assassins of Joseph Smith (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1975), 210, 214.
85. William H. Marnell, The First Amendment: The History of Religious Freedom in America (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1964), 149. “The limitation imposed by the First Amendment admits of little debate and has occasioned none. Congress has never shown the slightest inclination to establish a religion. The limitation imposed by the Fourteenth Amendment admits of endless debate and has come close to eliciting such. The question of applicability to specific situations depends on how the Supreme Court justices currently interpret the generalized phrases of an amendment couched in terms to invite dispute” (150).
86. Kenneth McCaleb, “Brigham Young,” New York Mirror, 15 September 1940, 14. McCaleb is alluding to a series of cases beginning with Lovell v. Griffin (1938), in which the courts struck down local laws prohibiting the distribution of Jehovah’s Witnesses literature.
87. Zanuck’s production of A Yank in the R.A.F., released in September 1941, portrayed Tyrone Power as an American flyer and also sympathetic participant in Britain’s fight against the Germans. The story was also written by Zanuck under his pseudonym Melville Crossman. Significantly, the film’s preparation, production, and release occurred well before America’s formal entry into the war, and earned from Newsweek a slap for prowar propaganda: “From the isolationist point of view, this production that was photographed here and in England with the cooperation and approval of Lord Beaverbrook, British Air Minister, the R.A.F., and the United States and Canadian Governments, is supercharged with propaganda” (Newsweek 19 [6 October 1941]: 60). For Zanuck’s interventionist sentiments prior to World War II, involving the Spanish Civil War, see Russell Campbell, “The Ideology of the Social Consciousness Movie: Three Films of Darryl F. Zanuck,” Quarterly Review of Film Studies 3 (Winter 1978): 51.

