The Iron Major | |
Director: | Ray Enright Edward Killy (associate) |
Producer: | Robert Fellows |
Screenplay: | Aben Kandel Warren Duff |
Story: | Florence E. Cavanaugh |
Starring: | Pat O'Brien Ruth Warrick Robert Ryan |
Music: | Roy Webb |
Cinematography: | Robert de Grasse |
Editing: | Robert Wise Philip Martin, Jr. |
Studio: | RKO Radio Pictures |
Runtime: | 90 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Gross: | $1 million (US rentals)[1] |
The Iron Major is a 1943 American biographical film about the famed college football coach and World War I hero, Frank Cavanaugh. Directed by Ray Enright, the screenplay was written by Aben Kandel and Warren Duff, based on Florence E. Cavanaugh's story.
Produced and directed by RKO Radio Pictures, the film premiered in Boston on October 25, 1943. The picture stars Pat O'Brien as Major Cavanaugh, along with Ruth Warrick and Robert Ryan.
Florence Cavanaugh and a priest, Tim Donovan, recall how in the 1890s, her husband Frank was playing college football for Dartmouth and then moved west to become a coach. "Cav" is introduced to Florence and eventually moves back east where he coaches at Holy Cross, where the football team's players include Tim.
Although he is father to seven children, Cav enlists in the war effort. A major, he is involved in heavy combat and seriously wounded, but recovers, gaining his nickname in the process. He ultimately returns home to continue coaching at Boston College, but an illness causes Cav to go blind, then ultimately claims his life.