Naturally, a ballplayer who craved the spotlight and never missed a chance to put on a show should be the subject of a Hollywood movie.

In 1952, the film “The Pride of St. Louis,” about the life of pitcher and broadcaster Dizzy Dean, came to theaters across the United States.
It got a better critical reception in New York and Los Angeles than it did in St. Louis.
From mound to movie
A master showman on the Cardinals’ Gashouse Gang teams of the 1930s, Dean was the last National League pitcher to achieve 30 wins in a season. Other pitchers of the era, such as Carl Hubbell, may have been as talented, but none matched Dean’s ability to perform theatrics and attract attention.
In his big-league debut for the Cardinals, he pitched a three-hitter and gained the affection of the fans. When he faced Babe Ruth for the first time, Dean got the best of the matchup and even had the Babe laughing. When armed robbers learned it was Dean who had been a victim of their stickup, they sent him a batch of neckties as a token of apology.
By 1951, Dean was an established and popular baseball broadcaster. Producer Jules Schermer pitched the idea of a movie about Dean to 20th Century Fox executives. After they bought in, Schermer approached Dean, “who was, of course, delighted” with the suggestion, the Associated Press reported.
The movie people envisioned the central characters to be Dizzy Dean, his wife, Patricia Dean, and Dizzy’s brother, Paul Dean, who also had pitched for the Cardinals. According to John Carmichael of the Chicago Daily News, Dizzy got $50,000 for the movie rights to his story. Paul was offered $15,000, but held out for more.
“Finally, I said I’d give him $5,000 of my end if he’d sign the danged contract, or we might never have got it made,” Dizzy told Carmichael.
In the book “Diz,” biographer Robert Gregory wrote that Patricia Dean negotiated the movie rights to Dizzy’s story and “settled for $100,000 _ payable, she insisted, in spread-out sums so the taxes would be smaller.”
Music man
Herman Mankiewicz was hired in 1951 to write the screenplay for “The Pride of St. Louis” from a story by Guy Trosper. Nine years earlier, Mankiewicz and Orson Welles won an Academy Award for best original screenplay for “Citizen Kane.”
Dan Dailey, known best for his work in musicals, was cast as Dizzy Dean.
In 1949, Dailey got an Academy Award nomination for best actor in “When My Baby Smiles at Me,” co-starring Betty Grable. (The best actor Oscar that year went instead to Laurence Olivier for “Hamlet.”) Dailey also appeared in 1949’s “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” with Frank Sinatra and Gene Kelly.
Soon after he was tabbed for the Dizzy Dean role, Dailey admitted himself to the Menninger Clinic in Topeka, Kan., for psychiatric treatment because of an emotional breakdown. “I’d cracked,” he told syndicated columnist Hedda Hopper.
Dizzy Dean kiddingly told people that Dailey “went nuts” at the thought of having to portray him, The Sporting News reported.
After five months at the clinic, Dailey was discharged and began preparing to film “The Pride of St. Louis” in late summer 1951.
Joanne Dru got the part of Patricia Dean. An actress who co-starred with John Wayne in westerns such as “Red River” (1948) and “She Wore a Yellow Ribbon” (1949), Dru was the sister of Peter Marshall, who went on to host the “Hollywood Squares” TV game show. Marshall’s son, Pete LaCock, became a big-league first baseman and hit a grand slam against Bob Gibson to beat the Cardinals’ ace in the last game of his Hall of Fame career.
A newcomer to movies, Richard Crenna was cast as Paul Dean. A radio performer, Crenna went on to have a long career in television (“The Real McCoys”) and film (most memorably, 1981’s “Body Heat”).
Learning curve
Dailey spent weeks studying slow-motion footage of Dean on the mound. “Then, working before mirrors, Dailey painstakingly imitated his windup, rear-back, and follow-through,” The Sporting News reported.
According to the Associated Press, Dailey pitched 45 minutes a day for three weeks to Ike Danning. A former minor-league catcher who got into two games with the 1928 St. Louis Browns, Danning coached Dailey on pitching motion.
“If determination means anything, he’ll look something like a pitcher,” Danning said. “It isn’t easy to teach a guy to look professional when he hasn’t played much baseball. It’s especially hard with a style like Dizzy’s.”
The baseball scenes were shot in Los Angeles at Gilmore Field, home of the Pacific Coast League’s Hollywood Stars, according to Internet Movie Database.
To get a feel for being a ballplayer, Dailey, wearing a Hollywood Stars uniform, sat on the team’s bench during a game, The Sporting News reported.
Dean, who went to Hollywood to see early clips of the movie, said Dailey “looks just like me when I was fogging them in there,” The Sporting News reported.
Starry night
The Missouri Theater at North Grand Boulevard and Lucas Avenue in St. Louis was site of the world premiere of “The Pride of St. Louis” on Friday night, April 11, 1952. The next day, the Browns and Cardinals were to play the first of two exhibition games at Sportsman’s Park before the regular season opened.
Attending the premiere were Dailey, Dru and her husband, actor John Ireland, Dizzy Dean and St. Louis mayor Joseph Durst, who proclaimed April 11-18 as Dizzy Dean Week in the city.
Several members of the Browns, including team owner Bill Veeck and manager Rogers Hornsby, attended, but no one from the Cardinals.
“It is understood the Cardinals declined to attend, even though the film has a great deal about the Cardinals team,” the St. Louis Post-Dispatch noted without offering an explanation.
Television station KSD did a live broadcast of the ceremonies from the plush theater lobby.
Different perspectives
New York Times critic Bosley Crowther wrote, “Baseball itself, while it runs loudly and rampantly all through the film, is not the major interest in this picture … It is Dizzy Dean, the character, the whiz from the Ozark hills, the braggart, the woeful grammarian, the humbled human being, that is dished up here.”
He rated the Herman Mankiewicz script “howlingly humorous,” noted that Dailey played Dean “in high gear and in accents that reek of the hills,” and gushed that the ending “brings a little tug on the heart and it leaves you grateful to all who made this picture _ and to a legend by the name of Dizzy Dean.”
Los Angeles Times critic John L. Scott also gave a rave: “How much of this is fact and how much fiction need worry nobody. It is entertaining and whether you like baseball or not you will find ‘Pride of St. Louis’ an enjoyable movie.”
In St. Louis, “Singing in the Rain” with Gene Kelly and Debbie Reynolds opened the day before “The Pride of St. Louis” premiered. Praising “Singing in the Rain” for having “everything you could want in a musical,” Post-Dispatch critic Myles Standish noted that “Kelly does a solo on a rain-swept street to the title song which should rank as a classic.”
As for “The Pride of St. Louis,” Standish disliked “a rather trite and tepid screenplay” that showed Dizzy “as an amiable, rather child-like, buffoon.”
Standish also didn’t like Patricia Dean being portrayed as a “conventional sweet movie wife bolstering up her man” instead of “the shrewd manageress she seems to be,” or that the concerns of a few teachers regarding Dean’s lousy grammar were “absurdly magnified into a phony dramatic climax.”
(“The Pride of St. Louis” earned Guy Trosper an Academy Award nomination for best story. The 1953 Oscar, however, went to a trio of writers for “The Greatest Show on Earth.”)
Dizzy Dean loved “The Pride of St. Louis.” By mid-April 1952, he’d seen it six times, according to biographer Robert Gregory.
“I ain’t saying this just because it’s about me,” Dean said, “but I think them Hollywood boys outdid theirself.”
See it for yourself: You Tube video
To be fair to Dizzy, a trite and tepid, child-like baboon describes 90 percent of today’s ballplayers as well. For anyone interested in watching the movie, here is a YouTube link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VY4UWpUjNaI
Thanks, Gary. Somewhere, a producer is pitching “The Jose Canseco Story,” …..
Perhaps the headliner would be, “Fast Cars, Fast Women and Jabs in the Ass.”
Oh how I wish you would be the screenwriter for that project.
I had forgotten about this movie. Is it too much of an exaggeration to say that if not for that cursed linedrive off his toe Dizzy would have won 300 games?
Thanks, Phillip. 1952 also was the year a movie about a 300-game winner, Grover Cleveland Alexander, was released in theaters. (Alexander had 373 regular-season wins, including 55 for the Cardinals, and had 2 wins and an iconic save for the Cardinals in the 1926 World Series.) “The Winning Team” starred Ronald Regan as Alexander and Doris Day as his wife.
Dailey was a big guy for a dancer, six-three or so. A little work on the spin rate and release point, and he could have been a 95-and-a-slider guy before it was fashionable.
Good stuff! If the Browns had stayed in St. Louis, maybe Bill Veeck would have been tempted to give him a chance.
Interesting story. Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for reading and for commenting. I visited your blog, The Littlest Typist, and really like your work. I’d recommend it to those visiting here.
As always, great research and write up Mark. It’s encouraging to hear about Dailey’s recovery – from the mental breakdown to acting again. I like that he put so much time and effort into being like Dizzy Dean. I’m looking forward to watching the movie.
Thanks, Steve. It is amazing how forthcoming Dan Dailey was in his 1951 interview with Hedda Hopper. For example, Dailey said:
“Anyone is lucky when he has the right kind of parents and has no trouble, serious trouble I mean, later in life. If you get off to a wrong start, there are little quirks, little twists in your personality and then if you hit something _ nothing drastic but just something that could happen to anyone _ and you’re flipping, you’re one of the unlucky ones.
“When you feel you’re flipping, there’s only one thing to do _ put yourself where you can’t do yourself, or anyone else, any harm. I wanted to hear a key turn between me and the world. I wanted to be locked in and I wanted everyone else to be locked out, away from me.”
What an explanation! Kind of a descent into madness. I’m glad he recuperated and hope all others in similar predicaments make it out too. Thanks Mark for sharing a very thoughtful quote.