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El novio de mamá

Título original: Three Daring Daughters
  • 1948
  • Approved
  • 1h 55min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.2/10
642
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Ann E. Todd, Jane Powell, Elinor Donahue, José Iturbi, and Jeanette MacDonald in El novio de mamá (1948)
Official Trailer
Reproducir trailer2:09
1 video
8 fotos
MusicalRomance

Tres niñas intentan ayudar a su madre divorciada a encontrar el esposo ideal.Tres niñas intentan ayudar a su madre divorciada a encontrar el esposo ideal.Tres niñas intentan ayudar a su madre divorciada a encontrar el esposo ideal.

  • Dirección
    • Fred M. Wilcox
  • Guionistas
    • Albert Mannheimer
    • Frederick Kohner
    • Sonya Levien
  • Elenco
    • Jeanette MacDonald
    • José Iturbi
    • Jane Powell
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.2/10
    642
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Fred M. Wilcox
    • Guionistas
      • Albert Mannheimer
      • Frederick Kohner
      • Sonya Levien
    • Elenco
      • Jeanette MacDonald
      • José Iturbi
      • Jane Powell
    • 21Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 5Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Three Daring Daughters
    Trailer 2:09
    Three Daring Daughters

    Fotos7

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    Elenco principal60

    Editar
    Jeanette MacDonald
    Jeanette MacDonald
    • Louise Rayton Morgan
    José Iturbi
    José Iturbi
    • José Iturbi
    • (as Jose Iturbi)
    Jane Powell
    Jane Powell
    • Tess Morgan
    Edward Arnold
    Edward Arnold
    • Robert Nelson
    Harry Davenport
    Harry Davenport
    • Dr. Cannon
    Moyna MacGill
    Moyna MacGill
    • Mrs. Smith
    • (as Moyna Macgill)
    Elinor Donahue
    Elinor Donahue
    • Alix Morgan
    • (as Mary Eleanor Donahue)
    Ann E. Todd
    Ann E. Todd
    • Ilka Morgan
    Tom Helmore
    Tom Helmore
    • Michael Pemberton
    Kathryn Card
    Kathryn Card
    • Jonesy
    Dick Simmons
    Dick Simmons
    • Mr. Hollow - Nelson's Secretary
    Larry Adler
    Larry Adler
    • Larry Adler (Harmonica Player)
    Amparo Iturbi
    • Amparo Iturbi
    Anita Aros
    • Switchboard Operator
    • (sin créditos)
    Don Avalier
    • Headwaiter
    • (sin créditos)
    Amparo Ballester
    • Cigarette Girl
    • (sin créditos)
    Nina Bara
    Nina Bara
    • Cuban Singer
    • (sin créditos)
    Leon Belasco
    Leon Belasco
    • Ship Bandleader
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Fred M. Wilcox
    • Guionistas
      • Albert Mannheimer
      • Frederick Kohner
      • Sonya Levien
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios21

    6.2642
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7ksf-2

    LONG musical. should have been 90 mins.

    Jeannette macdonald but no nelson eddy? He must have been busy that week! Lots of other big names though. Jane powell, eddie arnold, josé iturbi. Very high-pitched singing. I guess that explains why macdonald only made one more film after this....even the movie going public was getting sick of the operatic stuff. In the story, the three daughters interfere in mom's love life. They want to find their dad and bring him back home, but mom has other plans; while she's off on a lovely cruise to relax, she meets a man, and makes plans of her own. Iturbi even features as part of the story line, which he didn't usually do. Keep an eye out for his actual sister amparo, in a bit part. It's a long film. But pretty good, if you mute or fast forward now and then. Filmed at an interesting time. It's late enough to be filmed in spherical technicolor, and has a pretty modern discussion of divorce, which angered the legion of decency! But macdonald, arnold and harry davenport (plays Doc)had made so many old black and white films, it's kind of unusual to see them in a color film. Macdonald and davenport only worked a couple years after this before retiring. There's a funny moment where the housekeeper has broken the girls' secret code, and answers in their own code. And a very impressive harmonica solo by larry adler; while it was probably pre-recorded, it's probably the most impressive harmonica playing i have ever seen. That's probably the highlight of the film. Directed by fred wilcox. His forbidden planet was nominated for best special effects. And directed the 1949 version of the secret garden. Didn't direct many things, probably because he died young at 56.
    7aromatic-2

    Harmless Fun

    Silly but enjoyable musical comedy with Jeanette McDonald playing a character very much like herself, and Jose iturbi playing her love interest, a character even more like himself -- himself! Jane Powell and her two sisters are both multi-talented and precocious, and Edward Arnold heads a fine veteran supporting cast. Certainly not a great movie, but a pleasing one.
    8lugonian

    Two Many Husbands

    THREE DARING DAUGHTERS (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1948), directed by Fred M. Wilcox, is a family friendly musical/comedy starring Jeanette MacDonald in her first starring role in a motion picture since CAIRO (MGM, 1942) opposite Robert Young. Though most notable for her eight screen operettas opposite Nelson Eddy from 1935 to 1942, MacDonald by the time was simply a name of the past. Unlike MGM's star leading ladies as Greta Garbo and Norma Shearer, who both ended their careers in mediocre comedies by 1941-42, and unlike Joan Crawford who departed the studio by 1943 to make a triumph comeback and Academy Award winning performance for MILDRED PIERCE (Warner Brothers, 1945), MacDonald made her comeback in this Technicolor up-to-date story playing the mother of three daring daughters, the eldest played by Jane Powell, following her MGM debut success with HOLIDAY IN MEXICO (1946).

    Opening at a graduation ceremony at Miss Drake''s School for Girls, Tess (Jane Powell), the graduate, sings along with classmates with piano accompaniment by her middle sister, Ilka (Ann E. Todd). Tess notices her younger sister, Alix (Mary-Eleanor Donahue) in attendance, but wonders why her mother has not arrived yet. Next scene shows their mother, Louise Rayton Morgan (Jeanette MacDonald), editor of Modern Design Publications in New York City, awaken from a faint. Her doctor, Howard Cannon (Harry Davenport) diagnoses to her publisher,. Mr. Howard (Thurston Hall) that she has suffered a nervous breakdown. After arriving late at the graduation, Louise is rushed home. The doctor informs her daughters that their mother is in need of rest and relaxation, prescribing an ocean cruise, but without them. Wanting their mother to get well, they agree to the separation. Being left under the care of their housekeeper, Jonesy (Kathryn Card), Louise sets sail on the S.S. Cubana bound for Cuba. She soon makes the acquaintance of Mrs. Smith (Monya MacGill). Spotting concert pianist Jose Iturbi (Jose Iturbi) also on board, she invites him over. Their meeting finds Jose taking an interest more on Mrs. Morgan. Discovering she's divorced, he not only becomes her escort, but becomes her husband. Keeping her marriage a secret from her daughters, Louise is shocked to learn that, hoping that she and their father, Edward Morgan, would get together again, have arranged for him to come home, compliments of his employer, Robert Nelson (Edward Arnold), a millionaire business tycoon. What the girls don't know is that their father abandoned them years ago, and Louise finds herself torn between two husbands, a concert pianist and a foreign correspondent, whose paths might meet and stir up confusion for the children. The supporting players include: Tom Helmore (Michael Pemberton), Charles Coleman (The Butler), Dick Simmons (Mr. Hollow), and Virginia Brissac (Miss Drake). Harmonica player, Larry Adler, and pianist, Amparo Iturbi appear as themselves performing during Iturbi's concert performances.

    The motion picture soundtrack is as follows: "Alma Mater," "Fleurette" (by Victor Herbert); "The Turkish March" (by Wolfgang Mozart); "The Dicky Bird Song" (by Sammy Fain and Howard Dietz); "Passepied," "Liebestraum" (by Franz Liszt); "Where There's Love," "Ohne Mich Ohue Michjear Tag Dir Zu Lang," "Ritual Fire Dance," "You Made Me Love You" (by James Monaco and Joe McCarthy); "Happy Birthday," "Je Veux Vivre Daus Gedeve" by Georges Enesco; "Feliz Cupliano" (Happy Birthday in Spanish); "Roumanian Rhapsody # 1," "Hungarian Rhapsody" "Sweethearts" (sung by Jeanette MacDonald); "Allegro Appasionajo" (by Camille St. Saga); "Route 66" by Bob Troup; "Spring Time" Tchiakovsky's Fourth Symphony No. 4", "Movement CDA" and "The Dickie Bird Song."

    The plot to THREE DARING DAUGHTERS seems reminiscent to those Deanna Durbin musicals for Universal in the late 1930s, especially her debut lead in THREE SMART GIRLS (1936). Compliments of Joe Pasternak, who also produced those Durbin entries, would find similarities, though this not a remake but only a rehash with different elements involved. While Jeanette MacDonald's presence gives this production a nostalgic feel to those who remember her fondly a decade ago, Jane Powell's youthful presence provides for the younger viewers of the day. With MacDonald and Powell both accomplished sopranos, watching them duet together is a delight, especially their solo number of "Spring Time" with Powell's tender hold over MacDonald's shoulder showing her great admiration to this living legend. Ann E. Todd and Mary Eleanor Donahue are splendid as the younger daughters/sisters. It's a total surprise to find the adorable looking Donahue is the same television actress, Elinor Donahue, of television's "Father Knows Best" (1954-1960), the first season of "The Andy Griffith Show" (1960-1961), and other television roles. As much as this being a 1948 release, the telegrams dated 1946, along with movie marque of COURAGE OF LASSIE and NO LEAVE, NO LOVE, both 1946 releases, indicate THREE DARING DAUGHTERS was obviously produced that very same year.

    Though THREE DARING DAUGHTERS tends to go on a bit too long at 114 minutes, with repeated elements of having Edward Morgan stay away or return home grows tiresome, it's a wonder why Jose Iturbi, who plays himself, didn't assume a character name like Jose E. Turbi, for example, so not to have movie audiences believe that the real Jose Iturbi married Jeanette MacDonald. For Iturbi's next film,. THAT MIDNIGHT KISS (1949), he acted under his own name, but no indication of having a wife and three daring daughters carried on from this film. Jeanette MacDonald has come a long way since her movie debut in THE LOVE PARADE (Paramount, 1929). With her two comeback performances, THE SUN COMES UP (1948) being her next and last, THREE DARING DAUGHTERS is the obviously the better of the two.

    Formerly available on video cassette, and later DVD, THREE DARING DAUGHTERS can be seen and enjoyed whenever broadcast on cable television's Turner Classic Movies. (***1/2).
    gregcouture

    Four cooks didn't manage to spoil this bubbly broth!

    There are four writers credited for the script of this Technicolored concoction and somehow its froth still manages to fizz in a quite entertaining way. That's thanks in large part to an attractive cast and the delightful surprise of José Iturbi's charm as a very convincing actor. Plus, it almost goes without saying, some eminently listenable singing from Jeanette MacDonald and her young up-and-coming counterpart, Miss Jane Powell.

    • Mini-Spoilers May Ensue -


    Of course the manipulations of the rather simple plot are spun out almost to the point of frustration as a mother keeps her daughters in the dark about why their father and she divorced, the daughters plot to bring their father back from a distant work assignment, their mother meets and marries a charming man whom she truly loves, the daughters resist his introduction into their happy home, etc., etc., etc. Aaarrgh! It could have been utterly annoying, but Jeanette MacDonald, looking lovely, and Señor Iturbi, understandably falling head over heels for her, make for two adults who deserve their final happy song (with the three little vixens joining in) at one of the pianos that seem to be in every room of this film's many luxuriously appointed sets.

    A few things of note: Someone (the set decorators, the hairdressers, the color consultants, the cinematographer, whomever) had a liking for the color orange and its many gradations from pale peach to burnished bronze. There's some note of it somewhere in virtually every shot of every scene in this film!

    Young Miss Ann E. Todd (not to be confused with the English actress, Ann Todd) seems to have been forced to play almost every one of her scenes with a rather unbecoming scowl on her pretty, brown-eyed face. Its not out of character for the part she's playing, but it does seem a bit excessive.

    And, wouldn't you know it? (I did without even checking the IMDb Trivia on this title.) The Roman Catholic Legion of Decency found this film "Objectionable In Part For All" because it appears to "condone" divorce, an absolute no-no as far as that censorious body was concerned when it held such influential sway.

    But don't be deterred. Next time Turner Classic Movies unearths this bon-bon from their vaults, give it a whirl. It's fun to see how the better half lived and loved in simpler times, and when a major studio could make going to Cuba and back (without ever leaving Culver City, California - The story happens to involve a vacation cruise on a ship with the most impossibly large public rooms and private suites, enough to make a Greek tycoon's yacht look like a rowboat!) a visual treat every mile of the way.
    5bkoganbing

    Passing The Soprano Torch

    In a recognition of the fact that she was no longer a young soprano, Jeanette MacDonald in her final two films played a mom. And as the title Three Daring Daughters suggests she's the mom of three girls, one of whom is Jane Powell, a soprano of some note.

    Jeanette is a working mom, an editor of a magazine, who apparently doubles as a concert singer. She's been told, doctor Harry Davenport's orders to go on a much needed vacation. She takes a cruise and marries world famous concert pianist Jose Iturbi who is playing himself. Now to break it to the children.

    This is where the story goes astray. Her former husband who is never seen in the film is a foreign correspondent and we're told that Jeanette has told the children some great big fibs about what a wonderful man he was. Of course if he was so wonderful why were they divorced? The kids assume the reason for her listlessness before the vacation was that she was pining for dad. It's like the writers of Three Daring Daughters could not come up with a rationale that would satisfy the Code.

    Yet the film is good fun, it's nice seeing Jeanette and Jane trading high notes as it were. It's as if Jeanette was passing the soprano torch on to another generation, not just to Jane Powell, but to Ann Blyth and Kathryn Grayson for future MGM musicals.

    Jose Iturbi could not have done a better job just being Jose Iturbi. I remember meeting him as a kid years ago and getting an autograph from him. Even then I thought he was a class act. Of course he never took as a leading man at MGM, but I think Mr. Iturbi was a musician first and foremost. And he certainly was a sight better leading man than Liberace.

    If you can get over the tiptoeing of writer's feet around the Code, you'll like Three Daring Daughters.

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    • Trivia
      Features one of very few roles given to veteran bit player Moyna MacGill (Mrs. Smith), enabling viewers to see and hear how closely her looks and voice resemble those of her more celebrated daughter, Angela Lansbury.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Nelson and Jeanette (1993)
    • Bandas sonoras
      THE DICKEY-BIRD-SONG
      (uncredited)

      By Howard Dietz & Sammy Fain

      Sung by Jeanette MacDonald and Jane Powell, Elinor Donahue (dubbed by Jean Garbo) and Ann E. Todd (dubbed by Patt Hyatt)

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    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 25 de diciembre de 1948 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Italiano
      • Español
    • También se conoce como
      • Three Daring Daughters
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, Estados Unidos(Studio)
    • Productora
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 55min(115 min)
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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