Agrega una trama en tu idiomaStage struck Lydia Weston leaves her small Texas town for Broadway. Left behind is her steady beau Peter. Lydia sends letters and news clippings back home telling everyone she's now a big st... Leer todoStage struck Lydia Weston leaves her small Texas town for Broadway. Left behind is her steady beau Peter. Lydia sends letters and news clippings back home telling everyone she's now a big star. Peter soon heads to New York to surprise her, but instead he gets the surprise when he... Leer todoStage struck Lydia Weston leaves her small Texas town for Broadway. Left behind is her steady beau Peter. Lydia sends letters and news clippings back home telling everyone she's now a big star. Peter soon heads to New York to surprise her, but instead he gets the surprise when he learns Lydia has no job and is broke. The pair soon get involved with a couple of phony p... Leer todo
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Opiniones destacadas
Morris and Reagan are a pair of sharpie producers from the Max Bialystock school and Rosemary Lane is their secretary. She's an aspiring actress who left her small Texas town for a theatrical career. Eddie Albert is her hayseed boyfriend who comes to New York to find her.
Albert's bringing $20,000.00 to open in a business, but Morris and Reagan euchre it out of him on the condition that Lane star in the production. Fine but Ruth Terry is already committed and she has a gangster boyfriend in Milburn Stone who is getting out of the joint shortly and he's already invested some of his own coin on Terry's behalf.
All I can say is that Albert proves to be not quite the rube that Morris and Reagan take him for.
As for the plot you can find elements of The Producers and even more important Make Me A Star quite prominent in the story.
The ensemble players are perfectly cast Additional kudos also go to Jane Wyman who is both Ronald Reagan's wife in life and estranged wife in the movie. She is one smart dame who has a solution for all problems.
This was probably something meant originally for James Cagney and Pat O'Brien as the producers, but it works out fine here.
Wayne Morris and Ronald Reagan - a couple of stage producers who have a play but no money to produce it. Their friends and acquaintances are not forthcoming with cash. "Isn't it a wonderful thing," Morris notes, "how poor people can get when you're trying to raise some dough?"
Jane Wyman is hilarious as Reagan's wife. We meet her in his office, all dolled up, feet on his desk. She has won a big sweepstakes and is loaded--but she's not going to let Reagan blow her money on another lousy play. She hands him some bills: "Cuddles, there's your daily allowance." Reagan smiles delightedly. "TWO bucks?"
When our producers encounter Albert and his money, they quickly convince him to invest in their show and readily agree to hire Lane for the lead role. Complications set in when Ruth Terry shows up--she was the big star of their last flop and wants to star in this one too. She can't easily be brushed off because her boyfriend has taken an interest: "He's getting out of Alcatraz in three weeks. And boys? The kind of pineapples he throws don't come from Honolulu."
The great cast also includes Milburn Stone as the tough boyfriend and Tom Kennedy as his dim but enthusiastic henchman.
It's very funny, with lots of fast talking and a couple of neat plot turns. Rosemary Lane and Eddie Albert are just fine as the attractive lead couple--even though they are at times nearly drowned out by all the wackiness around them.
The fast-talking routines by Reagan, Morris and a very blonde and bleached JANE WYMAN at her snappiest are hardly the stuff of "bright farce" as an original review from The N.Y. Times states. The dull ROSEMARY LANE is supposed to be a gal with ambitions to become a great actress.
They're all capable performers and give their all to a tiresome show biz story that never is anything more than a routine programmer not worth a second look--or even a first one.
Based on a play by George S. Kaufman, it's strictly small time stuff, directed in the usual Warner Bros. frenzied style by Ray Enright.
Jane Wyman was a wonderful comic actress at this stage in her career and this was precisely her meat: hair bleached blonde and talking a mile a minute. Unfortunately, in a few years she would win an Oscar for playing a mute in JOHNNY BELINDA and would never get a chance to be this entertaining again.
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- TriviaBased on the play "The Butter and Egg Man" by George S. Kaufman which opened on Broadway at the Longacre Theatre, 220 W. 48th St., on September 23, 1925 and ran for 243 performances. The opening night cast included Tom Fadden, Robert Middlemass and Harry Stubbs. This is the fifth of six film adaptations of the play released from 1928 to 1953.
- Citas
Valerie Blayne: If I don't get $50 by this time tomorrow, I'm going to complain to Equity.
Mac McClure: Oh, no, no, no. Then there won't be any show.
Valerie Blayne: Exactly. But if there isn't any show, my boyfriend's going to be awfully disappointed. You know, he still feels badly about the money he lost on that last production of yours starring me, and the only way you can square yourselves is to star me successfully in this. Oh, by the way, he's getting out of Alcatraz in three weeks. And boy, the kind of pineapples he throws don't come from Honolulu.
Mac McClure: Listen, Valerie, why don't you give us a break. Don't forget what we did for the boyfriend's pals last year in Sing Sing... .
Marty Allen: Yeah, we went to lot of expense and trouble taking that whole show up there and putting it on for them.
Valerie Blayne: Yeah, and you started a riot too. They all complained to the Warden - said that the show wasn't in their sentence!
- ConexionesReferenced in All Star Party for 'Dutch' Reagan (1985)
- Bandas sonorasThere's a Small Hotel
(1936) (uncredited)
Music by Richard Rodgers
Lyrics by Lorenz Hart
Played by the theater orchestra before the show
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 9min(69 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1