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IMDbPro

Yanqui Dandy

Título original: Yankee Doodle Dandy
  • 1942
  • Approved
  • 2h 6min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,6/10
18 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
James Cagney in Yanqui Dandy (1942)
The life of the renowned musical composer, playwright, actor, dancer, and singer George M. Cohan.
Reproducir trailer3:55
2 vídeos
99+ imágenes
Classic MusicalBiographyDramaFamilyMusicMusical

La vida del reconocido compositor musical, dramaturgo, actor, bailarín y cantante George M. Cohan.La vida del reconocido compositor musical, dramaturgo, actor, bailarín y cantante George M. Cohan.La vida del reconocido compositor musical, dramaturgo, actor, bailarín y cantante George M. Cohan.

  • Dirección
    • Michael Curtiz
  • Guión
    • Robert Buckner
    • Edmund Joseph
    • Julius J. Epstein
  • Reparto principal
    • James Cagney
    • Joan Leslie
    • Walter Huston
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,6/10
    18 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Michael Curtiz
    • Guión
      • Robert Buckner
      • Edmund Joseph
      • Julius J. Epstein
    • Reparto principal
      • James Cagney
      • Joan Leslie
      • Walter Huston
    • 140Reseñas de usuarios
    • 51Reseñas de críticos
    • 89Metapuntuación
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Ganó 3 premios Óscar
      • 9 premios y 6 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos2

    Original Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 3:55
    Original Theatrical Trailer
    Yankee Doodle Dandy
    Trailer 3:56
    Yankee Doodle Dandy
    Yankee Doodle Dandy
    Trailer 3:56
    Yankee Doodle Dandy

    Imágenes105

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    Reparto principal99+

    Editar
    James Cagney
    James Cagney
    • George M. Cohan
    Joan Leslie
    Joan Leslie
    • Mary
    Walter Huston
    Walter Huston
    • Jerry Cohan
    Richard Whorf
    Richard Whorf
    • Sam Harris
    Irene Manning
    Irene Manning
    • Fay Templeton
    George Tobias
    George Tobias
    • Dietz
    Rosemary DeCamp
    Rosemary DeCamp
    • Nellie Cohan
    Jeanne Cagney
    Jeanne Cagney
    • Josie Cohan
    Frances Langford
    Frances Langford
    • Nora Bayes - Singer 'Over There'
    George Barbier
    George Barbier
    • Erlanger
    S.Z. Sakall
    S.Z. Sakall
    • Schwab
    Walter Catlett
    Walter Catlett
    • Theatre Manager
    Douglas Croft
    Douglas Croft
    • George M. Cohan - As a Boy of 13
    Eddie Foy Jr.
    Eddie Foy Jr.
    • Eddie Foy
    Minor Watson
    Minor Watson
    • Albee
    Chester Clute
    Chester Clute
    • Goff
    Odette Myrtil
    Odette Myrtil
    • Madame Bartholdi
    Patsy Parsons
    Patsy Parsons
    • Josie Cohan - As a Girl of 12
    • (as Patsy Lee Parsons)
    • Dirección
      • Michael Curtiz
    • Guión
      • Robert Buckner
      • Edmund Joseph
      • Julius J. Epstein
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios140

    7,617.6K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    8dougandwin

    A Flag Waving Triumph

    Right from the start, I have to say you do not need to be an American to be caught up in the excitement of the blatant flag waving tribute to a great artist. "Yankee Doodle Dandy" made to boost morale after the U.S. entered the war surely would have achieved its goal. It would have been even better in Technicolor (not the coloured version later shown). The songs were great, the acting and the individual dancing style of James Cagney was superb and deserved the Oscar. The two scenes featuring "Over There" were very moving with Frances Langford a standout! The story, while bearing small resemblance to real life, was good and Walter Huston and Rosemary de Camp were excellent. When you see a film such as this some 60 years after its release, and still really enjoy it, it shows how the Golden Years of Hollywood were just that.
    9clivy

    They don't make them like this anymore- and "Yankee Doodle Dandy" will make you sorry that they don't make them like this anymore

    `Yankee Doodle Dandy' makes the viewer say, `They don't make them like that anymore.' The film is uplifting for its espousal of unabashed patriotism and its representation of America as a place in which a gifted performer like George M. Cohan could rise from vaudeville to Broadway. It is also moving for its reverence for the nineteenth late century theatre and early twentieth century Broadway: the sequence showing Cohan's successes of the 1920s commemorate the other musical and non musical hits of the decade as much as Cohan's. I was moved to tears by the ending showing the elderly Cohan joining in a World War II parade, a group of soldiers marching to `Over There' and being asked why he isn't singing, `Hey old-timer, don't you know this song?' `Yankee Doodle Dandy' is a celebration of Cohan's life and career -- a little sanitised perhaps, but still portraying his love for his family, his profession and his country. It isn't a museum piece but more of a picture from another era – and in a time when America is honoured by songs such as `Kick Ass USA' it's a valuable reminder of an age when people feeling their country under threat roused their nationalism by reminding themselves of what made them want to fight for it.
    10bkoganbing

    Red White and Blue, Cagney for You

    James Cagney won his only Oscar for his recreation of George M. Cohgan in Yankee Doodle Dandy. Already terminally ill, Cohan lived long enough to see the film and no doubt he would have approved of it because it sure is how he would like to have been remembered.

    In 1942 when Yankee Doodle Dandy premiered there was a whole generations of people left alive who saw George M. Cohan perform. Watching the film today Cohan is like a figure from antiquity. But Warner Brothers was lucky to have James Cagney with the studio who's dancing style closely paralleled Cohan's. If it is ever run on Turner Classic Movies, make sure you see George M. Cohan's sound film The Phantom President. You will be astonished to see how closely Cagney captured his style. In the same way that Philip Seymour Hoffman captured Truman Capote and Joaquin Phoenix became Johnny Cash.

    Cohan's contemporaries are also like names from antiquity. But a century ago when Cohan was just hitting the big time performers like Fay Templeton, Nora Bayes, and Eddie Foy were very big stars and in 1942 plenty of people saw them also. I wish we had some film of them to see how Irene Manning, Frances Langford, and Eddie Foy, Jr. did in their recreations. I'm sure Foy, Jr. did a smashing job with his Dad.

    The background stuff is true enough. Cohan was born to a pair of vaudeville performers Jerry and Nellie Cohan played here by Walter Huston and Rosemary DeCamp. Later on a sister was added to the Cohan family and here Josie Cohan is played by Jeanne Cagney. They did do all the towns, big and small, in America. Cagney meets wife Joan Leslie at Shea's Theater in Buffalo, New York and Shea's survives to this day. And his first real success was Little Johnny Jones which score included American classics, Yankee Doodle Dandy and Give My Regards to Broadway.

    What's left out is the fact Cohan had two wives. His second wife survived him and died in the early Seventies. As his songs became popular in patriotic/rightwing circles, Cohan's personal politics reflected that. He fought hard and lost in the battle for Actors Equity. Cohan thought a union of players was tantamount to Communism. But such was his standing among performers that Cohan was granted the unique privilege of being allowed to appear on stage without having to join Equity once the union was recognized as the bargaining agent for players.

    Cohan is shown in Yankee Doodle Dandy as gracefully having retired when other trends in popular music took over. Far from it, he was a very bitter man and when he did that final comeback in I'd Rather Be Right he fought with Kaufman and Hart over the book and Rodgers and Hart over the songs.

    But Yankee Doodle Dandy presents the public musical face of George M. Cohan and does it very well. To this day, some forty years after first seeing Yankee Doodle Dandy on television, I love the recreations of Yankee Doodle Dandy, Give My Regards to Broadway, and You're a Grand Old Flag as they were first seen on stage. Plus some of the snatches of the lesser known Cohan songs as performed by the players portraying the Cohan family and others.

    When all is said and done, George M. Cohan was a great force of nature in the American musical theater. And we thank his father, mother, and sister, and George M. himself for what he left us.
    8AlsExGal

    Sure they took liberties with the facts, but the outcome is delightful

    The amazing piece of timing here is when Warner Bros. began work on this biography of entertainer George M. Cohan, WWII had not yet broken out. The attack on Pearl Harbor occurred the day before shooting began. When the film opened people on the home front badly needed some morale boosting, and this film gave it to them. It's just a joyous musical costume piece from start to finish with nice comic touches balanced with some sentimental moments (supposedly Walter Huston's deathbed scene had even taskmaster director Michael Curtiz crying). There's nothing in the way of real conflict or even much heavy in the way of romance between Cohan and his fictitious film wife "Mary", who was modeled after Cohan's actual second wife in some ways. Cohan was actually married twice. Oddly enough, it was Cohan who said he wanted as little romance in the film as possible.

    The more I learn about Cohan the more I realize that Cagney was perfect to play him - both Irish Americans, both about the same size and build, and George Cohan's style of dancing and singing were about the same as Cagney's. It's hard to believe that Fred Astaire was Cohan's first choice to play himself. Astaire was a great talent, but I don't think he could have conveyed the combination of mischief, optimism and energy that was Cohan the way that Cagney ultimately did. Several people criticize Cagney's dancing here, but that eccentric style was Cohan's, who always considered himself more of an overall entertainer than a dancer in the first place.

    If you're "date conscious" as I am, there are some matters of plot that might bother you. Cohan was born on July 2 or 3, not July 4. Cohan's mother outlived his father by eleven years and Cohan's father was not "very old" when he died as is said in the film - at least by today's standards. When Cohan's father died in 1917, he was only 69. Cohan's sister did die young - she was only 39, dying in 1916, plus she was not his little sister. Instead Josie was a year older than George. The film has Josie marrying when she would have been close to forty, when she actually married at the beginning of the 20th century and thus was the one to break up the four Cohans, not George. Also, Cohan received his Congressional Medal in 1936, not as WWII began as shown in the film. However the plot device of having George M. recount his life story to FDR, receiving his Congressional medal in the Oval Office, and then dance joyously down the White House stairs and into the streets joining a group of marching soldiers in a chorus of "Over There" was probably a great way to bridge Cohan's patriotic past with what was then an uncertain time that certainly needed a dose of his optimism.

    The one thing that I did find a little odd - and one thing isn't much in a two plus hour long movie - is that it is hard to spot the actual point in the film where Mary becomes George's wife. There is quite a bit of domesticity shown before the two were married. Mary is cooking for George, staying in his apartment alone waiting for him to come home from the show, and acting very much like they are already married. The only way you know they are not is that George very subtly pops the question to the point that I'm surprised even Mary knew what he was asking! I know this doesn't seem like much in today's world, but considering that they were trying to paint Cohan in the most positive light possible and that the living arrangements might be misunderstood, I am surprised that the censors of that time never raised the issue.

    At any rate, I highly recommend this one. You'll have a great time, at least in part because you can see that Cagney is having a great time. He always said this film was his favorite, and it shows in his performance.
    schappe1

    It seems it always happens...

    `It seems it always happens…Whenever we get too high hat and sophisticated for flag-waving, some thug nation decides we're a pushover, all ready to be blackjacked. It's not long before we start looking up mighty anxiously to make sure the flag is still waving.'

    So says James Cagney, as George M. Cohan, at the time of the sinking of the Lusitania in 1915. Obviously, it's a sentiment that has great relevance to our time, as well. I've always wished I could dance a patriotic dance or march down the street waving the flag. It looks like a lot of fun. The trouble is, this sort of activity is often performed to suppress what America is really about. The really great thing about our country isn't songs, flags and marches. Any country can do those things. The real great thing is that we have the right to say what we think, to debate the issues of the day and to form a consensus for action when we are in agreement about what needs to be done.

    There was surely such a consensus when this film was made in 1942. There was little doubt about what needed to be done then. However, World War I seems now a particularly pointless conflict and the thought that smiling Frances Langford was singing soldiers into battle to who knows what fate is a little disturbing. And now, whenever there is a war, we are urged to join the parade and postpone debate until the issue is something not so important, like farm prices or college entrance requirements. It seems to me that the more important an issue is, the more we should be debating it. If people are going to die, we'd better make sure we are right.

    From that point of view, `Yankee Doodle Dandy' can seem almost offensive. But, of course it isn't. Is a charming example of one of the thing Old Hollywood did best- the romantic biography. In this George M. is an all-right guy, an enormous bundle of energy that intimidates the stuffed shirts but causes people of substance to fall in love with him. He has a wonderful family and one of those `perfect' Hollywood wives- Mary, who doesn't even wince when he gives the song he wrote for her to another actress. He has a loyal friend and partner in Jed Harris. For some reason he's childless but still gets a thrill from performing for his beloved audiences. And, when his country needs a shot in the arm, his enthusiastic songs provide it.

    Of course, he was married twice. His divorce from his first wife Ethel, was acrimonious and thus she doesn't appear in the story. `May' is a fictionalized version of his second wife Agnes. He had children but they also didn't make the cut because he was estranged from them at the time of the film. He was loathed by many of his profession for years before this because of his strong anti-union stance. His split with Jed Harris was not the gentle retirement we see here but was, at least in part because Harris had given in to the unions. And he himself loathed Franklin Roosevelt, refusing for four years to pick up the medal FDR and Congress had awarded him. Would it have been a better movie if these things were incorporated into the script? Probably not. Hollywood- and the nation at the time- was more concerned with the way things should have been than with the way they actually were.

    Cagney was surely a perfect choice to play Cohan, being an Irishman who enter show business as a song and dance man, (and always considered himself primarily that). His exuberant personality also mirrors that of Cohan, who was said not to be particularly great at anything but did everything with such enthusiasm that it didn't matter. That said, I have never been a particular fan of Cagney's `puppet on a string' dance style. Dancing is supposed to be an expression of one's inner self. A puppet has no inner self.

    There are many charming sequences in the film, none more so than the `cute-meet' with Mary where he's played a dottering old man in a play and she thinks he really is one until he starts showing her dance steps. Then there's his refusal by the Army because of his age. He does another dance routine to show them what they are missing. You've got to love the sequence where he and Harris, (Richard Whorf), con Cuddles Zakal into backing them. Then there's a glimpse of Cagney cute sister, Jeanne, playing Josie, Cohan's sister. We are not told why Josie is `gone' late in the film- her heart attack at age 36 was deemed too unpleasant, as was the death of Cohan's mother, (Rosemary Decamp, who was more than a decade younger than Cagney). The one death scene is that of Cohan's beloved father, played by Walter Huston, who was a Cohan protégé. Chan himself was on his deathbed as this was released, (he submitted a script which was `tactfully rejected'). He escaped his nurse to see it in a theater and gave it his approval, as we should, too.

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    Argumento

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    • Curiosidades
      Many facts were changed or ignored to add to the feel of the movie. For example, the real George M. Cohan was married twice, and although his second wife's middle name was Mary, she went by her first name, Agnes. In fact, the movie deviated from the truth to such a degree that Cohan's daughter Georgette commented, "That's the kind of life Daddy would have liked to have lived."
    • Pifias
      The "You're A Grand Old Flag" number, supposedly takes place in the 1906 production of "George Washington Jr.," and uses multiple period flags to represent times before 1906. The Civil War flag, as an example, is correct for the time in question. However, in the final sequence characters carry, and an soft screen projection is made of, multiple 48 star flags. The 48 star flag was not introduced until 1912. In 1906, it should have been a 45 star flag. (Oklahoma was admitted to the Union in 1907, New Mexico and Arizona in 1912).
    • Citas

      George M. Cohan: My mother thanks you, my father thanks you, my sister thanks you, and I thank you.

    • Versiones alternativas
      Also available in a computer colorized version.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in The Voice That Thrilled the World (1943)
    • Banda sonora
      The Yankee Doodle Boy
      (1904) (uncredited)

      from the Broadway Show "Little Johnny Jones"

      Written by George M. Cohan

      Played during the opening credits

      Sung and Danced by James Cagney and Chorus

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    Preguntas frecuentes18

    • How long is Yankee Doodle Dandy?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 6 de junio de 1942 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Yanki Dandy
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • New York Street, Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California, Estados Unidos
    • Empresa productora
      • Warner Bros.
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
      • 11.800.000 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      2 horas 6 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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