StMU Research Scholars

Featuring Scholarly Research, Writing, and Media at St. Mary's University
October 6, 2018

“Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner” Serves Up Racial Equality

Winner of the Fall 2018 StMU History Media Award for

Best Article in the Category of “Year 1968”

The moment of truth was finally at hand for Stanley Kramer. Flashing camera lights could only capture his calm reflection, but underneath his tailored tuxedo, carefully styled hair, and beaming smile, was undeniable nervous anticipation. Tonight he would be in front of all the cameras, instead of instructing from behind them, and everything rode on the outcome of this evening. Stanley Kramer had levied a huge risk in taking on the direction and production of Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, and as he sat in the audience of the 1968 Academy Awards, he would soon find out whether his gamble had truly paid off. With the country politically fractured and the public divided, could Stanley Kramer realistically expect his movie to win the hearts and minds of the American people?

Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner is the comical drama piece written by William Rose, featuring an upper-class young woman who brings her new fiancé home to meet her parents in order to announce their engagement, after having met each other on a vacation just ten days prior. The older handsome man is quite the catch as an accomplished physician and Nobel Prize candidate. The only problem? He’s a black man intent on marrying their white daughter. The couple cause quite the stir in attempting to overcome interracial bias and be seen as any other couple in love wanting a parent’s blessing for marriage.

Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy | Courtesy of mptvimages.com

Coming together for their ninth film was the universally-loved on-screen couple Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn. The two major actors believed in the project wholeheartedly and agreed to the roles before even setting eyes on the script.1 The natural chemistry between the stars was undeniable, as was the illness rapidly overtaking Spencer Tracy. Almost at once, there was a major hold up in the attempt to start the production. After years of Tracy’s deteriorating health, no insurance company would cover Tracy in his failing condition. What was to become of a project that couldn’t get off the ground? For this movie to stand a chance at the box office, headlining two such profoundly loved actors as Tracy and Hepburn was crucial. An emotional solution was discovered between Stanley Kramer and Katharine Hepburn. They both decided that they would both put their salaries from the film into an escrow account, in the tragic event Spencer Tracy could not continue the movie. With that money as security, another actor could be hired as a last resort to finish the film if need be. With a solution that satisfied the Columbia Pictures production company, filming was finally cleared to begin.2

Obtaining the cast was just the initial problem that Kramer faced. Time was always working against the team, in a race against the clock to finish filming before Tracy became too ill. As a result, the cast members were continuously working with two separate scripts. The original script had the patriarch involved in as many scenes as possible, yet there was always a “back up” script circulating that eliminated Spencer Tracy’s character at any given point.3

Another major obstacle in filming Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner was Sidney Poitier’s intimidation from fellow actors. Despite his own prominent acting career and reputation as a calm and collected professional, Poitier felt humbled to be in the presence of such talent and could never remember his lines. At the time, Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn had both been Hollywood shinning stars for over three decades, and audience members had grown up with these silver screen marvels. Comparatively, Poitier’s acting career had gained more acceptance from his film releases overseas. American audiences had still not fully seen past his African-American ethnicity. This trepidation went on for weeks, frustrating the entire crew with reshoots and wasted film. Finally, Stanley Kramer pulled Sidney Poitier aside for a heart to heart talk in an attempt to get to the bottom of what was causing tempers to rise. The actor simply couldn’t focus in the presence of Tracy and Hepburn. In an attempt to keep Poitier on as a lead character, scenes were then shot as he delivered his lines to two high-back chairs, while stand-in crew delivered his costars’ lines.4

When the movie’s filming began in March 1967, it was still illegal for interracial couples to marry in fourteen states, mostly in the South. If the country could not accept the idea of blacks and whites intermarrying in real life, could Stanley Kramer realistically expect people to be any more agreeable to the idea being portrayed in Hollywood? If the movie was not welcomed by society, future prospects for everyone involved with the project would fall into jeopardy, if not certain ruin.

Coinciding with the film’s production was the Loving v. Virginia Supreme Court case. A white man and a black woman involved in a romantic relationship circumvented the Virginia legislation barring interracial marriages. In 1958, Mildred Jetter and Richard Loving drove to Washington D.C. to say their vows and become legally married. Soon after returning to Virginia, an anonymous tip was given to authorities and the newlyweds were arrested in their home in a late evening police raid. Local prosecution argued that a marriage license from D.C. was not valid in the state of Virginia and the couple were sentenced to a year in prison. The Lovings appealed the judge’s guilty verdict. Monumentally, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of Mr. and Mrs. Loving, just as production on Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner was wrapping up, ruling that marriage is a fundamental human right and effectively ending all anti-miscegenation marriage laws in America.5

Iconic Movie Scene of a Black Man Meeting White Fiancée’s Father | Courtesy of Cineoutsider.com

Tragedy struck just seventeen days after production concluded, when Spencer Tracy died of a heart attack. His passing gravely affected the cast, and overshadowed any joy of the movie’s release. Katharine Hepburn refused to attend any premiers or award ceremonies, let alone see the final movie cut, as the memories of her long-time costar were just too painful.6

Reviews of the movie from audiences and critics alike received an initial mixed response. The initial estimation was one of low attendance of Caucasians, especially in the Southern states. After all, new laws or not, long-standing socially-formed opinions take time to overcome. However, this was not the case, and never again was the race of a lead character a factor in projecting audience film acceptance.7 Written reviews were not so kind. Sidney Poitier took the brunt of criticism, not simply for being an African-American actor, but for being “too perfect” and “too white” in his role portraying a Nobel Prize nominated doctor.8

Stanley Kramer fiercely defended Sidney Poitier’s performance and explained that every character was meant to portray model social and moral perfection; only then could the sole protest land at the couple’s racial divides.9 In an attempt to clarify his intentions with the film, Kramer undertook a nine-university tour to discuss the political and social controversy. For all his efforts, Kramer was met by indifference at best and death threats at worst! The movie seemed to be caught in between an atmosphere of younger students who did not see interracial relationships as controversial, and the older generation who wanted to keep the races forever separate.10

The lights now dimmed on the Academy Awards audience, and the announcements began as everyone took their seats. Spencer Tracy’s widow was in attendance to hear her husband be nominated as Best Actor one final time. Katharine Hepburn was at home still mourning, and the magic of the evening was muted by sadness. But for all the hardships, when Stanley Kramer heard his name read as a nominee for Best Picture, he knew in his heart that the trials and bitter-sweet tribulations were all worth it in the end. Stanley Kramer did not win the award for Best Picture that night. But he had produced the most emotionally important movie of his career, directed award-winning performances, and showed all the Hollywood elite that they did not need to be afraid to take a leap of faith in making controversial films.

Winner of Two Academy Awards | Courtesy of Wikipedia Commons

When all was said and done, Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner became an international box office hit grossing over $70,000,000 and nominated for twenty-two different awards. In 2017, the movie title was entered into the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress for being culturally and historically significant.11

 

  1. Donald Spoto, Stanley Kramer: Film Maker (Putnam, 1978), 280.
  2. James Curtis, Spencer Tracy: A Biography (London: Hutchinson, 2011), 839.
  3. Bill Davidson, Spencer Tracy, Tragic Idol (Dutton Adult, 1988), 206.
  4.  Sidney Poitier, This Life (Alfred A Knopf, Inc, 1980), 286.
  5. Loving v. Virginia, 388 US (1967); Maria Mancha, “The Love Story of the Lovings,” StMU History Media. https://www.stmuhistorymedia.org/the-love-story-of-the-lovings, (accessed Oct 4, 2018).
  6. Katharine Hepburn, Me: Stories of my Life (Alfred A Knopf, Inc, 1991), 402.
  7. Mark Harris, Pictures at a Revolution: Five Movies and the Birth of the New Hollywood (Penguin Press, 2008), 374.
  8. Dolores R. Townek, Letter to the Editor, Ebony, June 1968.
  9. Christopher Andersen, An Affair to Remember: The Remarkable Love Story of Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy (William Morrow and Co, 1997), 295.
  10.  Mark Harris, Pictures at a Revolution: Five Movies and the Birth of the New Hollywood (Penguin Press, 2008), 398.
  11. Sheryl Cannady, “2017 National Film Registry is More Than a ‘Field of Dreams,'” Library of Congress, December 13,2017, https://www.loc.gov/item/prn-17-178/.

Annissa Noblejas

I am a Communication Studies major with a minor in History. My passion falls with research and I love to share new found knowledge with others. I am a military veteran, mother of four great kids, and coffee connoisseur.

Author Portfolio Page

Recent Comments

115 comments

  • Addie Piatz

    I have never seen this movie and really knew nothing about it until reading this article but it was honestly such an amazing article and it makes me want to go watch it. I think it was very awesome how it was a very controversial topic especially during this time but it was a very bold and very needed move for the film industry.

  • Jose Chaman

    Very good article. I found it interesting how the director of the film defended the neatness of his characters as the ideal model. Cinema is one of the best ways to share equity and, above all, the defense of human rights. If only we used this film resource more often to promote constructive values, we could achieve great achievements, as this movie did (or added) to the fight for equity.

  • Cristianna Tovar

    Before reading this article, I had no idea about the movie Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, but now I am very interested in it and I plan to watch it. I think it was a great idea to challenge society’s views on interracial marriage in 1967 by filming this movie. Although, as expected, it received criticism and backlash, it made history by normalizing interracial marriage and allowing society to change their viewpoints on it.

  • Ruby Wynn

    This is an amazing article. I had never heard of this movie before reading this article. It must have been terrifying for those involved in making a movie about such a controversial topic at the time. I found it interesting how the producer solved the problem of one of the actors being unable to remember his lines in front of the other actors.

  • Geremy Landin

    This is an amazing story. I am realizing day after day that there is so much to be learned and in a whole lifetime, there will never be enough time to discover all of the successes that things like this have brought. What I do know, is that a story like this, written from your perspective has sparked an interest. It has sparked a new google search and inquiry into the movies of the past and how they affected the interests of the times. I urge you to continue writing and take your passions for revealing this type of history to the next level. Lean on the elders that know and are still around. Lean on the professors that have the same interests, and stand tall with pride that this beautiful piece won in this category. Good luck!

  • Amariz Puerta

    What an award winning article this was a great read. I heard of this movie a couole times in my film class in highschool but I never thought I would be interested. I love how the movie cover, really shows the racial aspect. I feel like movies like this really set the bar to standards held for both social and racial conflicts. Great read!!

  • Thomas Fraire

    I’m happy this article was given an honor. I had no clue that this motion picture even existed. In the wake of perusing this, I truly need to watch it! I delighted in perusing this since it centers around social and racial issues. This motion picture was exceptionally intense because of the societal standards it broke amid this time. Despite the fact that the film’s plot might not have been profoundly refreshing when it was at first presented, I trust the performers were bold in resolving to assume such a dubious job, that was liable to profound analysis in the media.

  • Nadia Carrasco

    This was a great article! The back round story about this movie was truly inspiring and I did not even know it existed! After reading this article I am for sure going to have to watch the movie! This article does a great job at explaining the entire story and the true meaning behind this movie. When this movie came out it broke social norms that had been in place for decades. I find it so cool how the actors stepped out of their comfort zones to create something so special.

  • Ryan Estes

    I remember watching this movie back in middle school I believe. It was a great movie, from what I remember. This movie was very monumental because it was released around the time the Civil Rights Movement was taking place. The American people (including myself) love going to movies, so this was a great way to advocate for racial equality and acceptance in America at the time. I did not know that Sidney Poitier was intimidated by Tracy and Hepburn. It’s amazing what they can do with movies, i.e. filming Poitier with two high-back chairs instead of his fellow actors.

  • This was a fantastic article! I was invested in the lives of the actors and director throughout, and I definitely want to see this movie now. I myself am writing a story about an antebellum interracial relationship, so this piqued my interest! It’s such a disgrace that Sidney Poitier was shamed for being either too black or too white, kind of a “danged if you do, danged if you don’t” situation. Nevertheless, it was lovely to read about the familial relationship the entire cast built.

Leave your comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.