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On Over (1922), Little Annie Rooney (1925), and Irene (1926, based on the stage musical) center on young Irish American women, who, under the direction of white masculinity, successfully blend into the country’s melting pot. Often these films dramatized assimilation as an issue of generational difference: in them, parents who embodied the old Mick and Bridget stereotypes were shown to be less capable of assimilation than were their more Americanized offspring.

      In the 1930s, a few gangster films would acknowledge Irish Americans in organized crime. Based on real‐life criminals “Machine Gun” Kelly and “Baby Face” Nelson, these thugs portrayed by actor James Cagney might have presaged an anti‐Irish backlash. Yet films centered on Irish American hoodlums were invariably balanced by those that portrayed Irish Americans as law‐abiding citizens. For example, Cagney’s gangster character in Public Enemy (1931) has a policeman brother, and his character in Angels With Dirty Faces (1938) has a priest for a best friend. Cagney’s career itself dramatized Irish American assimilation into whiteness: his roles evolved from rebel outsiders to all‐American heroes. By 1940, he was starring in The Fighting 69th, a film about a famed Irish American regiment that fought in World War I. Two years later, Cagney won an Oscar for playing the flag‐waving Irish American showman George M. Cohan in Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942).

      Irish Americans in film (and in real life) worked hard to assimilate through overt indications of patriotism and loyalty. Irish Americans came to dominate urban police forces and fire departments, and many joined the armed forces. Overt displays of Irish American patriotism were made in the movies as well. John Ford became known for directing films that glorified the United States – primarily his legendary Westerns, but also a number of overtly patriotic war films during World War II. In both types of films, Irish American characters consistently appeared as true‐blue Americans. Picturing Irish Americans as ultra‐nationalists often went hand in hand with seeing them as pious and moral, specifically by linking them to Catholicism. By the 1940s, the most common image of Irish Americans in Hollywood films was either as policeman or as priest. Films such as Boys Town (1938), Angels With Dirty Faces, the Oscar‐winning Going My Way (1944), its sequel The Bells of St. Mary’s (1945), and Fighting Father Dunne (1948) showed Irish American priests kindly dispensing wisdom and morality to future generations. This image of Irish Americans as upholders of American moral rectitude extended to the industry itself. The Hollywood Production Code was written in 1930 by two Irish Americans, Martin Quigley and Jesuit Fr. Daniel Lord. When the Catholic Church organized the Legion of Decency to protest against violent and sexually licentious Hollywood films, Irish American priests led the way. And when the Production Code Administration responded in 1934 by instituting the Seal of Approval provision that enforced the Code, Irish American Joseph Breen helmed the organization (and did so for the next 20 years). Picturing Irish Americans as moral guardians possibly reached its apex with the short‐lived popularity of Senator Joseph McCarthy, a politician who exploited the Red Scare by pursuing potential communist agents in the United States.

Still frame from the 1944 film Going My Way displaying Father Fitzgibbon (played by Barry Fitzgerald) and Father Chuck O'Malley (played by Bing Crosby).

      Going My Way, copyright © 1944, Paramount.

Still frame from John Ford’s 1952 film The Quiet Man displaying Sean Thornton (played by John Wayne) and Mary Kate Danaher (played by Maureen O’Hara).

      The Quiet Man, copyright © 1952, Republic.

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