Um die Jahrhundertwende gerät eine Hochstaplerin in Schwierigkeiten mit dem Gesetz, während sie sich mit mehreren Freiern herumschlagen muss.Um die Jahrhundertwende gerät eine Hochstaplerin in Schwierigkeiten mit dem Gesetz, während sie sich mit mehreren Freiern herumschlagen muss.Um die Jahrhundertwende gerät eine Hochstaplerin in Schwierigkeiten mit dem Gesetz, während sie sich mit mehreren Freiern herumschlagen muss.
- Für 1 Oscar nominiert
- 1 Nominierung insgesamt
John 'Skins' Miller
- Quartet Member
- (as John Skins Miller)
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Written by the awesome miss west herself. It's new year's eve, 1899. Peaches has been kicked out of the city, but she's been spotted back around town. The usual antics and adventures... she tricks funny man charles butterworth into breaking and entering, a little larceny. And returns in grand fanfare as madamoiselle fifi. Hijinx ensue. It's mae west! Fun and silliness. The plot doesn't really matter...we're all going to have fun. Someone must have the rights to this locked up tight.. they never show it on turner classics. Too bad. Directed by ed sutherland. He really was married to marjorie daw, just like the children's poem. One interesting note... in the film, they have the parties at rector's dinner club; and george rector actually did run numerous restaurants, including one on broadway! High rating, just for being mae west!
Compared to some of Mae West's earlier efforts, this isn't that great. It is a little short of the great one-liners -- and doesn't team her up with someone like W.C. Fields (who brings his own laughs). If you are in the mood for Mae, catch her earlier films ("She Done Him Wrong"), or "My Little Chickadee" with Fields.
This lesser-known Paramount frolic, directed by Edward Sutherland, is one of Mae West's funniest and breeziest vehicles in her late period. It turned out to be her last Paramount picture, from her own solidly crafted screenplay. I had the opportunity of watching it recently along with another West movie called "Klondike Annie"(1936), directed by Raoul Walsh. Though Walsh is a vastly superior director than Sutherland, I much prefer this one to "Klondike Annie."
Set in the 1890s New York, Mae delightfully plays Peaches O'Day, a notorious confidence woman who sells the Brooklyn Bridge and flees the city while the police are looking for her capture. She later returns disguising as a hilariously droll French singer, Madamoiselle Fifi. Then she promotes the city's election candidate Capt.McCarey (Edmund Lowe), who also plays the good cop tracking down the corrupt police chief (Lloyd Nolan). Mae is aided by uniformly fine supporting players: Charles Winninger, Herman Bing, Charles Butterworth, Chester Conklin, and Louis Armstrong as the musical street cleaner.
Mae's suggestive one-liners are sparkling and fresh, especially the moment when she impersonates the French dame. Sutherland's unpretentious direction flows breezily through several hugely entertaining moments.
Pleasant and thoroughly enjoyable, "Every Day's Holiday" is must viewing for Mae West fans or anyone looking for harmless, pleasurable escape.
Set in the 1890s New York, Mae delightfully plays Peaches O'Day, a notorious confidence woman who sells the Brooklyn Bridge and flees the city while the police are looking for her capture. She later returns disguising as a hilariously droll French singer, Madamoiselle Fifi. Then she promotes the city's election candidate Capt.McCarey (Edmund Lowe), who also plays the good cop tracking down the corrupt police chief (Lloyd Nolan). Mae is aided by uniformly fine supporting players: Charles Winninger, Herman Bing, Charles Butterworth, Chester Conklin, and Louis Armstrong as the musical street cleaner.
Mae's suggestive one-liners are sparkling and fresh, especially the moment when she impersonates the French dame. Sutherland's unpretentious direction flows breezily through several hugely entertaining moments.
Pleasant and thoroughly enjoyable, "Every Day's Holiday" is must viewing for Mae West fans or anyone looking for harmless, pleasurable escape.
This movie is too disjointed to be good. In my view, the only thing going for it is Lloyd Nolan, the classic Hollywood MD. How many real doctors dreamed of imitating Lloyd Nolan's probity? So, it's a scream to see Nolan play a high-strung, wheeler-dealer, police chief.
True, Louis Armstrong does a cameo. He plays a trumpet, wears a marching costume and says nothing.
Mae West "wrote" the script and so there are basically no other women in the movie. Her double-entendres were too tired by the time this movie was made. But Mae West certainly knows how to wear a hat, and fill out her extravagant costumes.
True, Louis Armstrong does a cameo. He plays a trumpet, wears a marching costume and says nothing.
Mae West "wrote" the script and so there are basically no other women in the movie. Her double-entendres were too tired by the time this movie was made. But Mae West certainly knows how to wear a hat, and fill out her extravagant costumes.
My husband purchased the DVD of this movie, as well as an original movie poster for my birthday. I am a huge Mae West fan, and have been all my life I suppose. She was a wonderfully talented woman, strong minded and strong willed, and not ashamed of who she was. It was a wonderful movie, and I suggest it to all who are able to get the opportunity to watch it. It has a wonderful cast, wonderful writing, direction is done well, and Ms. West is at her finest. She is absolutely stunning to say the least. This is one of those movies that will give you a belly laugh. Hope you all go down and try to find some of her wonderful work. She was a great writer, and actress, and did so much for women writers in her day and today.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesOne of over 700 Paramount Productions, filmed between 1929 and 1949, that were sold to MCA/Universal in 1958 for television distribution and have been owned and controlled by Universal ever since. Its earliest documented telecast took place in Seattle WA Tuesday 18 November 1958; Mae West's pre-code reputation apparently influenced sponsors against it, even though it's strictly post-code, and airings were few and far between. One of its earliest documented telecasts took place in Pittsburgh PA Monday 18 April 1960 on KDKA (Channel 2). It was released on DVD 16 October 2012 as a single as part of the Universal Vault Series and again 8 March 2016 as one of nine titles in Universal's "Mae West: The Essential Collection".
- PatzerWhen Peaches draws an outline around Graves on the store window, the line is separated at the top of his head. But in the shot from behind, with her wielding the glass cutter, the line is now connected and the outline is narrower.
- Zitate
Peaches O'Day: He's so crooked he uses a corkscrew for a ruler.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Hollywood: The Gift of Laughter (1982)
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By what name was Every Day's a Holiday (1937) officially released in India in English?
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