Anthony Adverse is a 1936
American drama film directed by
Mervyn LeRoy. The
screenplay by Sheridan Gibney is based on the sprawling 1,224-page novel of the same title by
Hervey Allen. Neither
Michael Curtiz, who assisted with the direction, nor Milton Krims, who contributed to the script, received on-screen credit for their work.
Plot
The plot of the
epic costume drama follows the globe-trotting adventures of the title character, the illegitimate offspring of Maria Bonnyfeather, the wife of the cruel and devious middle-aged
nobleman Marquis Don Luis, and Denis Moore. When he learns of his wife's affair, Don Luis challenges her lover to a duel. Denis is killed, and shortly thereafter Maria dies in childbirth. Don Luis leaves the infant at a
convent, where the
nuns christen him Anthony, and lies to wealthy merchant John Bonnyfeather, Maria's father, telling him that the infant is also dead. Ten years later, completely by coincidence, the child is apprenticed to Bonnyfeather, his real grandfather, who discovers his relationship to the boy but keeps it a secret from him. He gives the boy the surname Adverse in acknowledgement of the difficult life he has led.
As an adult, Anthony falls in love with Angela Giuseppe, the cook's daughter, and the couple weds. Soon after the ceremony, Anthony departs for
Havana to save Bonnyfeather's fortune. The note Angela leaves Anthony is blown away and he is unaware that she has gone to another city. Instead, assuming he has abandoned her, she pursues a career as an
opera singer. Anthony leaves
Cuba for
Africa, where he becomes corrupted by his involvement with the
slave trade. He is redeemed by his friendship with Brother François, and following the
friar's death he returns to
Italy to find Bonnyfeather has died and his housekeeper, Faith Paleologus (now married to Don Luis), will inherit the man's estate fortune unless Anthony goes to
Paris to claim his inheritance.