In an interview printed in
Royal Decree (1983), Rex Stout's authorized biographer John McAleer asked the author if there were any chance of Hollywood ever making a good Nero Wolfe movie. "I don't know," Stout replied. "I suppose so. They made a movie of another story I wrote —
The President Vanishes. I hate like hell to admit it but it was better than the book, I think."
Paramount Pictures commenced production on its film adaptation of
The President Vanishes before the book was even published. In August 1934, journalist
Herbert Bayard Swope, who bore a slight resemblance to
Franklin D. Roosevelt, tested for the lead role at Eastern Service Studios in
Astoria, Queens. Although Swope confided to
The New York Times that the results of the screen test were "not bad," he decided against playing the role. Produced by
Walter Wanger and directed by
William Wellman,
The President Vanishes began filming in Hollywood September 10, 1934. The film is described in John Douglas Eames'
The Paramount Story: Andre Sennwald reviewed the film for
The New York Times:
The President Vanishes was adapted for the screen by Lynn Starling, Carey Wilson and Cedric Worth, with uncredited contributions by
Ben Hecht and
Charles MacArthur. "Forty-two years later, paired in a revival with
Robert Penn Warren's ''
All the King's Men'', it could still stir audiences," wrote John McAleer. "For the initiated the film supplied a hint of the tale's authorship. Placing a glass of dark liquid before President Stanley, Mrs. Stanley said, 'Here's a new stout for you to try.'" ==Publication history==