You Must Remember This
By April 1942, Warner Brothers producer Hal B. Wallis was scrambling to get a small project based on a script called
Everybody Comes to Rick's off the ground. The manuscript had arrived at the studio's mailroom the day after Pearl Harbor and everyone felt this could be the right story for the turbulent times. For the lead actress, they had considered Michèle Morgan, the French actress who'd just had a hit with
Joan of Paris, but her $55,000 price tag was too much for Wallis. He turned his attention to Ingrid Bergman, who'd showed talent, but had only appeared in a few films since arriving from Sweden. But Bergman would also only cost $25,000. The big problem was that Bergman was under contract to David Selznick. To plead his case, Wallis sent the screenwriters, the brothers Julius and Philip Epstein, to visit Selznick. According to Aljean Harmetz's
The Making of Casablanca: Bogart, Bergman and World War II, Selznick was slurping soup as Julius Epstein started off: "There are refugees and transit visas and intrigues," and suddenly I realized that I had talked about 20 minutes and Bergman isn't even in the story. So I said, "Oh, it's going to be a lot of shit like
Algiers." Selznick, who was actually tried to place Bergman, agreed to loan her out for 8 weeks under the condition that Wallis loaned him Olivia De Havilland for 8 weeks — whom he never actually used. The role would not only make Bergman a star, but would prove to be her most memorable role, even though she never particularly liked the job she did.
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