Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueElaine Bradford is a young singer and dancer, looking for her big break. Peter Carlton is a gossip columnist facing a deadline and a blank page. So, Peter invents "Mrs. Smythe-Smythe", a mys... Tout lireElaine Bradford is a young singer and dancer, looking for her big break. Peter Carlton is a gossip columnist facing a deadline and a blank page. So, Peter invents "Mrs. Smythe-Smythe", a mysterious Englishwoman who spends her days hunting tigers in India, jumping out of airplanes... Tout lireElaine Bradford is a young singer and dancer, looking for her big break. Peter Carlton is a gossip columnist facing a deadline and a blank page. So, Peter invents "Mrs. Smythe-Smythe", a mysterious Englishwoman who spends her days hunting tigers in India, jumping out of airplanes, and generally driving men mad with her beauty. Since no one in London has ever seen Mrs.... Tout lire
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Headwaiter
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- Orchestra Conductor
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- Call boy
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- Dancer (Extra)
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- Ticket Collector
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- Matthews' dance partner
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Avis à la une
Following the phenomenal success of EVERGREEN, Gaumont-British put Jessie Matthews into a whole series of similar films all with a familiar cosy, warm feeling of predictability. They're all essentially rags to to riches tales where a struggling dancer finally makes it big.
Jessie Matthews as always utterly adorable and in this film her singing is also a lot more pleasant since she's abandoned her earlier pseudo-operatic style. She immediately engages your emotions, straight away you are on her side, rooting for her..... well almost straight away. Even back in the thirties, it took audiences a while to get used to Jessie Matthews' weird affected accent. That incongruous upper class accent just didn't go with a struggling working class girl trying to get into show business. Although in reality, Jessie Matthews had indeed been a struggling working class girl wanting to get into show businesses and she did that partly by attending elocution lessons to wipe out all traces of her cockney accent! That cut-glass way of speaking didn't make her popular everywhere especially in the working class north where for some insane reason they preferred Gracie Fields films. There's no accounting for taste!
Albeit predictable, this has all the classy hallmarks of Gaumont-British, snappy direction from Victor Saville, a script that's still very funny even today and of course an utterly charming star. Besides exhibiting buckets of talent she does of course look absolutely stunning - some of the outfits she wears would probably not have been allowed over in America where The Hays Code was now in force to ensure decency and improve the morals of that nation. One of her dresses looks very similar to THAT dress Marilyn Monroe wore in SOME LIKE IT HOT and as for the 'spray-on' glittery body suit at the end - well that would certainly make those dogs in that cinema wag their tails!
There are many humorous sections in this film, eg, the scene where Peter and Freddie decide on their celebrity, Raymond's exasperation with the theatre (I hate the theatre....I hate the people...). The cast are all good and Sonnie Hale is funny in most of his scenes. The film is Britsh and I was surprised at the quality of both the production and the comedy. It doesn't contain that stupid British humour of the time. It is actually quite funny!
But best of all, the film has Jessie Matthews singing and dancing. The songs are all fine but her dancing is great. She was easily up there with the best that Hollywood could provide at the time. Maybe she was THE best of her time. All the dances are good, my favourite being the sequence where she is trapped into giving a performance of a Hindu temple dance. She has no idea what she is supposed to do and starts somewhat hesitantly but then turns it into the most enjoyable solo tap dance sequence in any film that I can remember seeing. A joy to watch. I was pleasantly surprised by this film.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesGaumont British, capitalising on the success of Toujours vingt ans (1934), issued double-sided lobby cards advertising further Jessie Matthews vehicles - First a Girl (1935) and "Modern Masquerade" - on the same card, with the latter eventually released as It's Love Again.
- ConnexionsEdited into Heroes of Comedy: Terry-Thomas (1995)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Modern Masquerade
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 23 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1