In 1941, husband-and-wife screenwriting team Ernest Maas and Frederica Sagor collaborated on ''Miss Pilgrim's Progress'', a story about a young woman who enters the business world by demonstrating the newly invented typewriter in the window of a
Wall Street establishment. When she tries to fend off the unwanted advances of one of the firm's clerks, her employer comes to her rescue but is killed when he falls down the stairs in the ensuing altercation. Abigail Pilgrim becomes the focus of a murder trial that attracts widespread coverage by the media and the attention of
Susan B. Anthony when the concept of women working in offices comes under fire. Acting as their agent,
Paul Kohner brought the story to several studios.
RKO and
MGM expressed some interest, but both eventually passed.
20th Century Fox finally purchased the screen rights, and initially planned on starring
Jeanne Crain, but the project stalled. Finally, studio head
Darryl F. Zanuck, searching for material for
Betty Grable, decided to tailor it to her talents, cutting Crain loose. After it underwent several rewrites, Zanuck assigned the task of whipping the screenplay into shooting shape to George Seaton, who would also direct. Working with
Kay Swift, Ira Gershwin sorted through songs he and his brother George had written but never used and selected eleven for the film's musical numbers. Frederica Sagor was unhappy with the tunes and later observed, "Not even if they had scraped the very bottom of the barrel could they have come up with something so unmelodious." Displeased with the treatment her and her husband's original story was given, she called the result "another stupid boy-meets-girl Zanuck travesty." Despite Betty Grable's popularity as a top moneymaking film star at this time,
The Shocking Miss Pilgrim was a box office disappointment. ==Song list==