Then there was “Father Goose,” a comedic Hollywood film distributed by Universal Pictures in 1964.
Actor
Cary Grant, at age 60, played the lead character Walter Eckland, who was
assigned the military code name “Father Goose” during World War II.
Eckland, a former college history professor-gone-rogue, was basically minding his own business and enjoying his new life as a South Pacific Ocean beach bum in 1942…until he gets bamboozled into serving on a secluded island as a “coast watcher” for the Royal Australian Navy.
Commander Frank Houghton (played by Trevor Howard) sweetened the pot for Eckland by having his sailors hide bottles of Scotch whisky in strategic locations on Matalava, one of the Banks Islands, located off the northeast coast of Australia.
For every confirmed sighting of Japanese fleet and aircraft movements that the ever-thirsty Eckland reported, Cmdr. Houghton revealed the location of another liquor bottle.
As “insurance,” Cmdr. Houghton “accidentally disabled” Eckland’s primary vessel, a customized 1929 Chris-Craft Commuter cabin cruiser named Catherine.
Eckland
was essentially marooned. His only viable “transportation” was a seven-foot dinghy
with a putt-putt motor.
The action heats up when Eckland is forced to share his primitive island hut with a stranded party of eight – French school headmistress Catherine Frenau (played by Leslie Caron) and seven schoolgirls in her charge.
One
film critic remarked: “The proper Freneau and the disheveled Eckland fight like
cats and dogs and, naturally, get married in the end. In other words, it’s the
plot of a perfect Cary Grant movie.”
Eckland
also evolves as a father figure for the seven girls, taking them under his
wing, to protect them and care for them.
The comedic peak of “Father Goose” comes when Catherine is foraging for berries with one of the girls when she slips off a log and falls into some shallow water. She exclaims that something has bitten her, and they misidentify a partially submerged tree branch as a snake.
Upon returning to the hut, Catherine tells Walter what has happened. In turn, Walter contacts Cmdr. Houghton, who tells him there are three species of snake native to Matalava, and they are all lethal.
Since nothing can be done, Frank advises
Walter to keep Catherine “comfortable” until “the end comes.”
As such, Walter plies Catherine with the one thing of which he has plenty…booze. It also takes no time for the alcohol to loosen Catherine’s tongue and demeanor.
Catherine finally passes out, and they all believe she has died. One of the girls sets out to exact revenge on the supposed snake.
She brings what was mistaken for a
snake back to the hut. Now that they all know the “snake” is just a stick,
Walter whips the blanket back he had placed over Catherine…to discover she is
quite alive.
Entertainment beat writer Larry Fahey of Boston, Mass., a frequent contributor to The Rumpus, an online literary magazine based in Asheville, N.C., said: “Eckland was a slovenly, drunken misanthrope, but to Grant, it was the perfect role.”
In “Father Goose,” Grant thought he found the part that would enable him to earn the “ultimate badge of Hollywood club membership, an Academy Award (as best actor),” Fahey said.
For most of his acting career, Grant typically played the role of a handsome, sophisticated, suave, debonair leading man. He said: “After dressing so carefully for my films for so many years, I wanted to do the opposite” – stepping away from iconic suits and silk ties and relaxing, growing a scruffy beard and wearing jeans and rumpled shirts.
Grant
was born as Archibald Alec Leach in Bristol, located on the River Avon in South
West England. His parents were impoverished. He became attracted to the theater
at a young age.
At 16, Archibald Leach was a stage performer with a troupe that toured the United States. He decided to put down roots in New York City. He was a trained stilt-walker and also made waves as a vaudeville performer.
He arrived in Hollywood in the early 1930s, and Paramount Studios officials said Archibald Leach sounded too British.
The young actor selected the name of Cary Grant, because the initials “C.G.” had already proved very fortunate for a fellow named Clark Gable.
During this 30-plus year career in film, Cary Grant appeared in 72 movies.
Grant was nominated twice for a “Best Actor” Oscar, in 1942 in “Penny Serenade” (shown above) and in 1945 in “None but the Lonely Heart” (shown below), but he came up short both times.
“Father Goose” did win an Academy Award in 1964, in the category of “Best Story and Screenplay – Written Directly for the Screen.”
In his acceptance speech, screenwriter Peter Stone remarked: “Thank you to Cary Grant, who keeps winning these things for other people.”

































































