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Twenty Million Sweethearts

  • 1934
  • Approved
  • 1h 29m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,3/10
503
MA NOTE
Ginger Rogers, Pat O'Brien, Allen Jenkins, Dick Powell, and The Mills Brothers in Twenty Million Sweethearts (1934)
ComédieComédie musicaleMystèreRomanceComédie romantiqueJukebox MusicalParodie

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueUnscrupulous agent Rush makes singing waiter Clayton a big radio star while Peggy, who has lost her own radio show, helps Clayton.Unscrupulous agent Rush makes singing waiter Clayton a big radio star while Peggy, who has lost her own radio show, helps Clayton.Unscrupulous agent Rush makes singing waiter Clayton a big radio star while Peggy, who has lost her own radio show, helps Clayton.

  • Director
    • Ray Enright
  • Writers
    • Warren Duff
    • Harry Sauber
    • Paul Finder Moss
  • Stars
    • Dick Powell
    • Pat O'Brien
    • Ginger Rogers
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    6,3/10
    503
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Ray Enright
    • Writers
      • Warren Duff
      • Harry Sauber
      • Paul Finder Moss
    • Stars
      • Dick Powell
      • Pat O'Brien
      • Ginger Rogers
    • 14Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 7Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 1 victoire au total

    Photos25

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    Rôles principaux72

    Modifier
    Dick Powell
    Dick Powell
    • Buddy Clayton
    Pat O'Brien
    Pat O'Brien
    • Rush Blake
    Ginger Rogers
    Ginger Rogers
    • Peggy Cornell
    The Mills Brothers
    The Mills Brothers
    • The Mills Brothers
    • (as The Four Mills Bros.)
    Donald Mills
    Donald Mills
    • Donald MIlls - Member of the Mills Brothers
    Harry Mills
    Harry Mills
    • Harry Mills - Member of the Mills Brothers
    Herbert Mills
    • Herbert Mills - Member of the Mills Brothers
    John Mills
    • John Mills - Member of the Mills Brothers
    Ted Fio Rito
    Ted Fio Rito
    • Ted Fio Rito - Band Leader
    Ted Fio Rito Orchestra
    • Ted Rio Rita and His Orchestra
    • (as Ted Fio Rito and His Band)
    Allen Jenkins
    Allen Jenkins
    • Pete
    Grant Mitchell
    Grant Mitchell
    • Chester A. Sharpe
    Joseph Cawthorn
    Joseph Cawthorn
    • Herbert Brokman
    • (as Joseph Cawthorne)
    Joan Wheeler
    • Marge
    Henry O'Neill
    Henry O'Neill
    • Lemuel Tappan
    Johnny Arthur
    Johnny Arthur
    • Norma Hanson's Secretary
    The Radio Rogues
    • Three Mimics
    • (as The Three Radio Rogues)
    Jimmy Hollywood
    • One of the Three Radio Rogues
    • (as Jim Hollingwood)
    • Director
      • Ray Enright
    • Writers
      • Warren Duff
      • Harry Sauber
      • Paul Finder Moss
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs14

    6,3503
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    Avis en vedette

    7blanche-2

    when radio was king

    What a fun film, and what an education about the entertainment field, taking us back to the early '30s and the importance of radio.

    Pat O'Brien has one of his wheeler-dealer roles as Russell Blake, an agent who's not delivering the great talent he's promised his boss but keeps getting pay advances nonetheless. Finally he's fired. However, at a restaurant, he hears a singing waiter, Buddy Clayton (Dick Powell) do a goofy "The Man on the Flying Trapeze" and brings him to the attention of the radio station. Reluctantly, his boss (Joseph Cawthorne) gives Buddy an audition - and is immediately sorry. Admittedly it's hard to hear Buddy's real voice singing the Flying Trapeze song.

    Eventually, however, everyone hears Buddy sing and a radio show sponsor wants him. The current singer, Peggy Cornell (Ginger Rogers) clicks with Buddy, which makes for complications.

    The score by Dubin and Warren is very good, as well as other songs, and there are performances by the Mills Brothers, bandleader Ted Fio Rito, Ginger Rogers, and The Radio Rogues.

    The versatile Dick Powell had a beautiful tenor voice, showcased here, and Rogers is delightful. They made a cute couple. Besides his in front of the camera talent, Powell was a very astute businessman and had a keen eye for talent himself. During his career, he acted, produced, directed, and was responsible for giving Aaron Spelling and Sam Peckinpah their starts. Rogers of course would go on to do her films with Astaire.

    Fun film, some good music, loved the cast.
    7AlsExGal

    Not exactly 20 million chuckles but still lots of fun

    This is a pleasant little romantic musical comedy in the tradition of 1930's Warner Brothers, minus Busby Berkeley and minus some of the rougher precode elements of some of Warner's musicals from 1933 and before.

    Dick Powell plays Buddy Clayton, a singing waiter in a beer garden discovered by the slippery fast-talking talent scout Rush Blake (Pat O'Brien). Rush takes Buddy back east where he becomes a radio singing sensation and heartthrob, although it does take awhile and a few odd quirks of fate. In the meantime, Buddy has started up a romance with singer Peggy Cornell (Ginger Rogers) that is leading to the altar, but the sponsor of the radio show on which Buddy sings says that a married heartthrob is no heartthrob at all, and instructs Rush to talk the pair out of marriage. This split is at first amicable and temporary, but then Rush dreams up a publicity stunt that misfires hilariously.

    The film features the music and lyrics of Warren and Dubin, the comic support of familiar Warner contract player Allen Jenkins, and the direction of Ray Enright who managed to get this one right - it's funny in all the right places without being inane.

    They really put a damper on Ginger Rogers' performance this time. After playing the tough precode chorine in the earlier Berkeley musicals, here they've turned down the volume on her sauciness a couple of notches. Plus, in anticipation of the production code, the romance between Peggy and Buddy is squeaky clean. There is no taking a can opener to metal bathing suits or checking into the Honeymoon Hotel in this musical as there was the previous year.

    Highly recommended as a pleasant way to spend 90 well-paced minutes.
    6utgard14

    "I'm not a customer! I'm a prophet from the promised land."

    Pushy talent agent (Pat O'Brien) makes a radio star out of a singing waiter (Dick Powell). Powell's new heartthrob status means he has to remain single in the public eye but he wants to marry Ginger Rogers. So O'Brien schemes to break them up. Pat O'Brien talks so fast in this I'm surprised he was ever able to catch a breath. Dick Powell's singing is good and he has a rootable quality about him. Ginger's likable and fun. Not one of her better roles but okay. This is an amusing musical comedy. Some laughs and nice songs. One of the best parts is singing quartet The Mills Brothers. This may not be a highlight in the careers of the stars but it's an entertaining way to pass the time. Any movie with Allen Jenkins in it can't be bad.
    7bkoganbing

    "To Sing My Love Songs To"

    Twenty Million Sweethearts is out of that era of wonderful musical entertainment that Warner Brothers did the very best of in the Thirties. It's a musical about radio during that quarter of a century when it was the most popular entertainment medium. Dick Powell and Ginger Rogers play a pair of young hopefuls eager to break into radio and Pat O'Brien is Powell's discoverer/manager whose machinations get Powell in the door and almost out of the industry before he's started.

    O'Brien played this part so often in those years he could have phoned in the performance, but it's what you expect of him. He finds Powell as a singing waiter doing a boffo version of The Man On The Flying Trapeze, a very popular song in 1934 with it getting a prominent place in It Happened One Night.

    Pat may be a little too sharp for his own good, but he does know talent and he brings him to radio station owner Grant Mitchell and sponsor Joseph Cawthorn. They've got a girl singer in Ginger Rogers already, but Ginger and Dick hit it off. But there are complications and they make up the rest of this film.

    Harry Warren and Al Dubin wrote most of the original score for this film and the best song in the film is one of my personal favorite Dick Powell number, I'll String Along With You. It's sung both solo and as a duet with Rogers. Powell recorded it and Fair and Warmer for Brunswick records and it enjoyed a good sale during the Depression. It was recycled for Doris Day for her film My Dream Is Your's where it's done as a lullaby to her small son. But when you hear Powell do it, you will hear him at his best as a singer. Interestingly enough Doris's film is also about the radio industry. Powell also does a nice scat version with the Mills Brothers of Out For No Good which is also done by Rogers as a solo.

    Twenty Million Sweethearts was done by Ginger on loan out from RKO where she had just signed a long term contract. She had just done Flying Down To Rio, her first with Fred Astaire. Previously she had worked with Powell though not opposite him in 42nd Street and Golddiggers of 1933. Jack Warner thought they'd make a good team together and they did make some beautiful music and beautiful box office. But she made even bigger box office with Flying Down To Rio over at RKO with Astaire and RKO wasn't about to give her up. So the screen team of Powell and Rogers never made another film.

    Take note of the performance of Allen Jenkins as the grouchy host of a kid's radio program, he's got some very nice lines. When you hear talk of a Hooper rating, back in the day that referred to the barometer of popularity, like the Nielsen is for today's television. I liked hearing the Radio Rogues, only hearing them mind you, at the beginning of the movie where you hear them do their imitations of the current radio stars. They had appeared in Bing Crosby's We're Not Dressing earlier in the year at Paramount and now that they were not in his film, his imitation is added to their repertoire.

    Twenty Million Sweethearts is charming and entertaining with a nice cast going through their usual paces on screen. It may not be the best film ever made about radio, but until the day that one comes along, I'll string along with Twenty Million Sweethearts.
    8skybar20

    Forgotten Musical That's Great Fun

    I found this film to be light hearted and great fun musically. Grant Mitchell almost steals the show as the near apoplectic manager of the radio station. It's always fun to see radio settings in old movies, as it's a form of entertainment (in this manner) long gone. Dick Powell displays the boyish charm that made him a hit in movies. Ginger Rogers, often overlooked as the great film actress that she was, gives her usual excellent performance as does Pat O'Brien. The opening of the film, with The Radio Rogues doing horrible impersonations of then celebrities (some of whom are long forgotten), gets off to a wobbly start, but things manage to pick up with O'Brien's character setting the pace. The Mills Brothers lend a wonderful contribution with their smooth effortless song style. I liked this film and would urge anyone who enjoys the music of the early and mid 1930s to tune in when it's scheduled.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Screenwriter Julius J. Epstein first arrived in Hollywood about 10:30 p.m. on October 14, 1933 and by midnight was collaborating on the screenplay of Twenty Million Sweethearts (1934) as pages had to be turned in early Monday morning.
    • Gaffes
      At about the one-hour mark Buddy Clayton (Dick Powell) is in a hotel room chatting with Pete (Allen Jenkins). As Powell reaches, his vest buttons itself.
    • Citations

      Pete: Well, I've put all the kiddies east of the Mississippi to bed. How's rehearsal?

      Peggy Cornell: Oh awful. Some yokel stood outside the rehearsal hall making and stared at me until I nearly broke me up. What have you got a summons?

      Pete: No, fan mail.

      Peggy Cornell: Oh. Three of them. That's two more than last week! Your public are growing up and learning to write.

      Pete: Listen to this: Dear Uncle Pete. I am well. How are you? I hear you on the radio every night. Great stuff for a he man poet... Have you heard my last poem, Peggy?

      Peggy Cornell: I sure hope so.

      Pete: Frankie Wallace was a pug. He laid his opponents out like a rug. Until one day... Wait a minute! You haven't heard the last of it.

      Peggy Cornell: Well. You've got me cornered.

      Pete: Frankie Wallace was a pug. He laid his opponents out like a rug...

    • Connexions
      Featured in Ce plaisir qu'on dit charnel (1971)
    • Bandes originales
      The Last Round-Up
      (1933) (uncredited)

      Written by Billy Hill

      Sung with modified lyrics by Eddie Foster, Billy Snyder, Matt Brooks and Morris Goldman

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 26 mai 1934 (United States)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Hot Air
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • société de production
      • First National Pictures
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 29 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Ginger Rogers, Pat O'Brien, Allen Jenkins, Dick Powell, and The Mills Brothers in Twenty Million Sweethearts (1934)
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    By what name was Twenty Million Sweethearts (1934) officially released in India in English?
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