In 1936,
Warner Bros. Pictures began to develop an adaptation of the
MacBride and Kennedy stories by detective novelist
Frederick Nebel. These stories featured a no-nonsense cop named MacBride and his friend known as Kennedy, a hard-drinking newspaperman. For the film version, Kennedy was changed to a woman named Theresa "Torchy" Blane and became the love interest of the cop, whose name was now spelled "McBride". Torchy's lifestyle was more compatible with the
Hays Code than a faithful on-screen adaptation of Kennedy would have been. The first film was based on Nebel's
MacBride and Kennedy story "No Hard Feelings". (The story was later adapted again as the 1941 film
A Shot in the Dark, which was not a Torchy Blane film.) Director
Frank MacDonald immediately knew whom he wanted for the role of Torchy Blane.
Glenda Farrell had already played hard-boiled reporters in earlier Warner Bros. films,
Mystery of the Wax Museum (1933) and
Hi, Nellie! (1934), she was quickly cast in the first Torchy Blane movie,
Smart Blonde, with
Barton MacLane playing detective Steve McBride. Farrell and MacLane would co-star in seven of the nine Torchy Blane films by Warner Bros.
Smart Blonde was released on January 2, 1937, the film was a surprise hit, and Warner Bros. made eight more movies from 1937 to 1939. In the fifth film,
Torchy Blane in Panama (1938), Warner Bros. replaced Farrell and MacLane with
Lola Lane and
Paul Kelly. Negative fan reaction led Warner Bros. to recast Farrell and MacLane in the lead roles. They starred in three more Torchy Blane films. The Torchy Blane unit was unusually close-knit, with many of the actors in recurring roles.
Tom Kennedy appeared in all nine Torchy Blane features as Gahagan, McBride's slow-witted cop sidekick given to bursts of poetry. Character actor George Guhl made notable appearances in all but the last entry in the series as forgetful desk sergeant Graves. Joe Cunningham appeared in seven installments as Maxie, Torchy's beleaguered city editor; in the other two films,
Raymond Hatton was Maxie.
Frank Shannon also appeared in seven as Capt. McTavish, McBride's superior officer. Character players Harry Seymour (who doubled as dialogue coach) and Jack Wise were in seven films each. Character comedian
Jimmy Conlin appeared three times as the police coroner. Composer
Howard Jackson was credited with scoring all nine films. In 1939, Glenda Farrell left Warner Bros., and the studio recast the leading roles with
Jane Wyman (who had played hatcheck girl Dixie in the first Torchy film) and
Allen Jenkins for the series' final entry,
Torchy Blane... Playing with Dynamite (1939). In a review headlined "Failing Material Stymies Whole Cast", the
Hollywood Reporter graded the film as routine, and noted, "It is impossible to believe that a pretty and smart young girl like Jane Wyman could possibly be in love with a broken down detective who looks like Jenkins." Warners had already announced that this would be the final Torchy Blane picture; a leftover Torchy Blane script was adapted into the 1939 film
Private Detective, also starring Jane Wyman, but not as the Torchy character. ==Portrayals==