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IMDbPro

Todos los días son fiesta

Título original: Every Day's a Holiday
  • 1937
  • Approved
  • 1h 19min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,1/10
590
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Mae West in Todos los días son fiesta (1937)
ComediaMusical

Añade un argumento en tu idiomaAt the turn of the century, a con woman finds herself in trouble with the law while dealing with multiple suitors.At the turn of the century, a con woman finds herself in trouble with the law while dealing with multiple suitors.At the turn of the century, a con woman finds herself in trouble with the law while dealing with multiple suitors.

  • Dirección
    • A. Edward Sutherland
  • Guión
    • Mae West
  • Reparto principal
    • Mae West
    • Edmund Lowe
    • Charles Butterworth
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    6,1/10
    590
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • A. Edward Sutherland
    • Guión
      • Mae West
    • Reparto principal
      • Mae West
      • Edmund Lowe
      • Charles Butterworth
    • 16Reseñas de usuarios
    • 9Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado para 1 premio Óscar
      • 1 nominación en total

    Imágenes12

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    Reparto principal29

    Editar
    Mae West
    Mae West
    • Peaches O'Day
    Edmund Lowe
    Edmund Lowe
    • Police Captain Jim McCarey
    Charles Butterworth
    Charles Butterworth
    • Larmadou Graves
    Charles Winninger
    Charles Winninger
    • Van Reighle Van Pelter Van Doon
    Walter Catlett
    Walter Catlett
    • Nifty Bailey
    Lloyd Nolan
    Lloyd Nolan
    • John Quade
    Louis Armstrong
    Louis Armstrong
    • Jubilee Band Leader
    George Rector
    • George Rector
    Herman Bing
    Herman Bing
    • Fritz Krausmeyer
    Roger Imhof
    Roger Imhof
    • Trigger Mike
    Chester Conklin
    Chester Conklin
    • Cabby
    Lucien Prival
    Lucien Prival
    • Danny the Dip
    Adrian Morris
    • Henchman
    Francis McDonald
    Francis McDonald
    • Henchman
    John Indrisano
    John Indrisano
    • Henchman
    Irving Bacon
    Irving Bacon
    • Quartet Member
    Allen Rogers
    • Quartet Member
    John 'Skins' Miller
    • Quartet Member
    • (as John Skins Miller)
    • Dirección
      • A. Edward Sutherland
    • Guión
      • Mae West
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios16

    6,1590
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    Reseñas destacadas

    10rmunderhill

    The wonderful woman

    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.
    6SnoopyStyle

    appreciate the comedy

    Chief of police Quade (Lloyd Nolan) has had enough of con-woman Peaches O'Day (Mae West). She had sold the Brooklyn Bridge again and she keeps doing it. Quade orders Police Captain Jim McCarey (Edmund Lowe) to arrest her, but he is taken with her charms. She promises to leave town, but instead she charms the wealthy recluse Van Doon (Charles Winninger) and his butler Larmadou Graves (Charles Butterworth).

    Mae West wrote the script. It's not my favorite. It is a little unnecessarily complicated. Van Doon and Graves should be her underlings right from the start. Their connection confuses me. Maybe I am missing something about these characters or maybe they are awkwardly presented. Nevertheless, McCarey simply needs more time with Peaches O'Day. This should be a rom-com. I'm not laughing at the comedy as much as I see the comedy and appreciate it.
    August1991

    Lloyd Nolan is Funny

    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.
    10binapiraeus

    Relive the turn of the 20th century!

    Once again in her favorite era, the Gay Nineties (that is, the end of it: New Year's Eve, 1899), Mae West looks perfectly comfortable and swell - and in her element: as a small-time crook, 'selling' the Brooklyn Bridge to strangers... Police Chief 'Honest John Quade', who's also running for mayor, is obsessed by the idea of getting her arrested at last - because she had the 'impudence' to turn the crooked politician down. But the 'flatfoot' (as Mae alias 'Peaches O'Day' calls her 'special friends' from the New York police force) McCarey, who's assigned to the case, just 'isn't able' to get her - because he's in love with her and always lets her get away...

    But finally, he HAS to do his duty: he tells her unmistakeably that she's got to leave town. 'Peaches', though, has other plans which she works out at a crazy New Year's Eve party in the famous, renowned old 'Rector's Restaurant' with a new acquaintance of hers - a butler and his rich master, who 'hates women'... until he sees Peaches, of course! So, together with her 'manager', they decide that she'll actually leave for Boston - and return, with a black wig and a French accent, as a famous French singer for whom they'll put up a big show...

    Although, of course, by 1937 the Production Code showed no mercy anymore ESPECIALLY with Mae West's well-known 'dubious' scripts, and "Every Day's a Holiday" looks a lot tamer than her pre-Code movies, it's still a VERY enjoyable piece of entertainment, with an exceptionally good cast, a quite nice and clever story, nostalgic song numbers (Mae sings not only with a lovely French accent, but also in perfect French!), and generally a lively, inventive comedy you can just watch over and over again - Hollywood nostalgia at its very best!
    6theowinthrop

    "Vote For McCarey"

    This is not the worst film of Mae West's career (MYRA BRECKENRIDGE and SEXTETTE share that position), but it is not one of her best films. She is saddled with the wrong performer as her leading man. Edmund Lowe was a decent actor, but not one to set the world on fire. It is significant that his pairing with Victor MacLaglan in a series of films starting with the silent film version of WHAT PRICE GLORY was what he was best recalled for - so that Mike Todd gave the two a joint cameo in AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 DAYS. If his role had been played by the villain of the film, Lloyd Nolan (one of the best character actors in Hollywood history) the film would have been better. Still Nolan is able to give it some mileage. It needs it. West is good (selling the Brooklyn Bridge to Herman Bing and cutting a hole into the window of a jewelry shop by doing a silhouette using a typically dense Charles Butterworth). Butterworth was still capable of his punctuating style of hesitant "accidental" humor. As one of the three backers of the honest Lowe against the crooked Nolan in a Mayoral campaign, he is ably assisted by Walter Catlett and Charles Winninger. Their best moment is when, to protect Lowe, they try to drug him and only succeed in drugging themselves.

    There are not many films dealing with 19th Century New York City politics (most of which was quite corrupt - usually due to Tammany Hall). The most recent one is Martin Scorsese's THE GANGS OF NEW YORK, which gives a nearly correct view of the depth of corruption, but makes the mistake of making Boss Tweed an ally of a gangster (Daniel Day Lewis) based on Bill "the Butcher" Poole. Bill Poole (like Lewis) was a "know-nothing" - he hated immigrants, especially those from Ireland who were Catholics. Tweed actually was so pragmatic a political genius that he built his political machine on the Irish and other immigrant groups. He would never have worked with Poole and his friends.

    Besides THE GANGS OF NEW YORK there is UP IN CENTRAL PARK (wherein Tweed is played by an elegant Vincent Price, not by a heavy set actor). And that would seem to be it. EVERY DAY'S A HOLIDAY is the only other notable film dealing with mayoralty politics, and West does try to show how questionable it was. Nolan seems to be backed by the party machine, and Lowe is the honest outsider. There were a few honest mayors who tried to reform the city. Most are forgotten today (William Havemeyer, Edward Cooper, Abram Hewitt, William R. Grace, Seth Low). But then most New York City mayors are forgotten except by historians. Aside from Fiorello LaGuardia and Rudy Giuliani (both of whom left a deep imprint on their times - Giuliani due to 9/11 actually more than his policies) most of the 20th Century mayors are forgotten. Only one (the corrupt but likable Jimmy Walker) merited a movie - BEAU JAMES. LaGuardia did become the subject of a good musical (FIORELLO) but it was never filmed. So one has to do with just the three movies mentioned earlier.

    Nolan's McQuade is the corrupt (if smart) Chief of Police. Actually no Police Chief ran for Mayor in 19th Century New York City. But West, and whoever else helped with the script, may have been thinking of a series of police scandals in the 1890s, leading to the Lexow Committee hearings. The most notorious casualty from this was the great Chief of Detectives, Captain Thomas Byrnes. Byrnes (the inventor of "the Rogues' Gallery") was a tough, no nonsense police officer of the old school - civil liberties meant little to him in cracking cases. But he was forced into retirement because he took bribes (mostly stock gifts and tips) from Wall Street figures. Byrnes made sure the work atmosphere of Wall Street was not interrupted by thieves (he set up a "warning line" south of which was unhealthy for any pickpockets or thieves to be traveling without any legal reason). The stock gifts and tips were in gratitude for what he had done.

    The film helps capture of the period, but it is meant as a harmless comic entertainment. So it can't be too deep or perceptive of the actuality. Still it is a glimpse at it.

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

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    • Curiosidades
      One 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".
    • Pifias
      When 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.
    • Citas

      Peaches O'Day: He's so crooked he uses a corkscrew for a ruler.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Hollywood: The Gift of Laughter (1982)
    • Banda sonora
      Fifi
      Written by Sam Coslow

      Performed by Mae West (uncredited)

    Selecciones populares

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    Preguntas frecuentes16

    • How long is Every Day's a Holiday?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Watch a short film about turn-of-the-century tunes on YouTube

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 31 de diciembre de 1937 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Francés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Every Day's a Holiday
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • General Service Studios - 1040 N. Las Palmas, Hollywood, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos
    • Empresas productoras
      • Paramount Pictures
      • Emanuel Cohen Productions
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      • 1h 19min(79 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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