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IMDbPro

La femme en cage

Titre original : Hitting a New High
  • 1937
  • Approved
  • 1h 25min
NOTE IMDb
4,9/10
382
MA NOTE
Edward Everett Horton, Eric Blore, John Howard, Jack Oakie, and Lily Pons in La femme en cage (1937)
ComédieMusicalRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueLili Pons and Jack Oakie star as a nightclub singer with aspires to be an opera diva and the met star whom she chases all the way to a safari in Africa to make her dreams come true in this w... Tout lireLili Pons and Jack Oakie star as a nightclub singer with aspires to be an opera diva and the met star whom she chases all the way to a safari in Africa to make her dreams come true in this wacky musical comedy.Lili Pons and Jack Oakie star as a nightclub singer with aspires to be an opera diva and the met star whom she chases all the way to a safari in Africa to make her dreams come true in this wacky musical comedy.

  • Réalisation
    • Raoul Walsh
  • Scénario
    • Robert Harari
    • Maxwell Shane
    • Gertrude Purcell
  • Casting principal
    • Lily Pons
    • Jack Oakie
    • John Howard
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    4,9/10
    382
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Raoul Walsh
    • Scénario
      • Robert Harari
      • Maxwell Shane
      • Gertrude Purcell
    • Casting principal
      • Lily Pons
      • Jack Oakie
      • John Howard
    • 10avis d'utilisateurs
    • 6avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 1 Oscar
      • 2 victoires et 1 nomination au total

    Photos48

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    + 40
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    Rôles principaux34

    Modifier
    Lily Pons
    Lily Pons
    • Suzette, aka Oogahunga, the Bird-Girl
    Jack Oakie
    Jack Oakie
    • Corny Davis
    John Howard
    John Howard
    • Jimmy James
    Eric Blore
    Eric Blore
    • Cedric Cosmo, aka Captain Braceridge Hemingway
    Edward Everett Horton
    Edward Everett Horton
    • Lucius B. Blynn
    Eduardo Ciannelli
    Eduardo Ciannelli
    • Andreas Mazzini
    Luis Alberni
    Luis Alberni
    • Luis Marlo
    Vinton Hayworth
    Vinton Hayworth
    • Carter Haig
    • (as Jack Arnold)
    Leonard Carey
    Leonard Carey
    • Jervons, Blynn's Butler
    John Alban
    John Alban
    • Party Guest
    • (non crédité)
    Joe Bacon
    • African Native
    • (non crédité)
    Brandon Beach
    • Party Guest
    • (non crédité)
    Jeanne Beeks
    • Party Guest
    • (non crédité)
    Edward Biby
    Edward Biby
    • Party Guest
    • (non crédité)
    Jack Clisby
    • African Native
    • (non crédité)
    James Conaty
    • Guest
    • (non crédité)
    Nathan Curry
    • African Native
    • (non crédité)
    LeRoy Edwards
    • African Native
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Raoul Walsh
    • Scénario
      • Robert Harari
      • Maxwell Shane
      • Gertrude Purcell
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs10

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    Avis à la une

    6Doylenf

    Showcase for Lily Pons features good comic support...

    HITTING A NEW HIGH puts the spotlight on LILY PONS and her coloratura soprano vocal range, but unfortunately has a plot that is beyond silly. For publicity purposes, JACK OAKIE and EDWARD EVERETT HORTON decide to perpetuate the idea that she was discovered in the African jungle, a bird girl who happens to have a gorgeous singing voice. Horton puts her under the tutelage of a voice teacher so that he can put her on display as his own singing discovery. From that point on, the plot is saddled with even more improbabilities until finally everyone is happy that Miss Pons has been anyone's discovery, so impressive is her singing voice.

    Indeed, RKO made sure that she gets to sing several arias (superbly), trilling her way through difficult arias with great ease and charm. But she was never the most photogenic of singers and no amount of close-ups are able to disguise the fact that she is not your typical Hollywood glamor girl. However, despite the banality of the plot, she seems a good sport to play the "bird girl" with such gusto.

    For plot purposes, most of the spotlight is on JACK OAKIE, EDWARD EVERETT HORTON and ERIC BLORE--which turns out to be a good thing when it comes to comic relief. Horton and Blore are particularly effective in their zany roles, both capable of injecting some good laughs into the script.

    Summing up: Pleasant trifle does indicate that Miss Pons had one of the best soprano voices at the Met (for some thirty years), even if she was not quite star quality on the screen.
    3skiddoo

    nobody combines opera, jazz, & screwball comedy these days

    If we substituted similar-looking Eleanor Powell for Lily Pons, this could be an Astaire movie, the look and cast are so familiar. I would say, though, you really have to like opera to sit through so much of it in quite static staging in this movie. The way she used her voice in Africa to sound like a bird was for me the best part and quite remarkable as was the bird on her finger to whom she sang. (The animal wranglers had some real challenges in this production and did an excellent job.)

    I was glad to hear the famous opera star but her speaking voice was unpleasant and her persona uninteresting. And it had one of those endings that was so boring I felt they needed a certain number of minutes and then concluded the movie. So on the whole I'd say it's one to watch if you have time to kill and aren't too choosy. I'm giving this an extra star for the music and animals--the parrot in the final scene was far more interesting than what happened to the characters. It isn't particularly witty or engaging or entertaining or...anything. Whatever originality it had vanished after the African adventure. It's just kind of there and most if it might be best enjoyed by using it as background music while you did something else.
    5blanche-2

    showcase for Lily Pons

    In the old days, studios would bring opera stars into movies. Some were successful - Nelson Eddy, Jeanette McDonald, Grace Moore, Lawrence Tibbett, Lauritz Melchior, Tony Martin, Mario Lanza and others. A few made a stab at it but weren't quite right. Lily Pons is one of those.

    When Pons was in her sixties, I was a young student studying voice and for some reason my mother was always throwing her in my face. I have no idea why - she would occasionally show up at a gala and there's no way she had any high notes at that age - your cords thicken - so I have no idea what she was doing.

    Anyway, she was very famous. For some reason, again in the old days, opera houses didn't mind that these singers had voices the size of a mosquito. Unreal.

    Pons stars here in "Hitting a New High" from 1937. She plays Suzette, who sings with her boyfriend's (John Howard) band, but her heart is in opera, and she wants an audition with the great opera impresario Mr. Mazzini (Eduardo Cianelli) desperately. When she meets a big patron's assistant Corny (Jack Oakie), she tells him that she will do anything to get in to see Mr. Mazzini.

    Corny arranges for his boss Lucius Blynn (Edward Everett Horton) to "discover" Suzette in the jungle and bring her back to New York. When he first sees her, she is singing to the birds and can't speak English. They call her the "Bird Girl."

    Blynn brings her back to New York, fixes her up with a vocal coach, and then tries to convince Mazzini to hear her. Suzette has gotten a lot of publicity as the Bird Girl but her boyfriend Jimmy insists that she sing with his band in the evening. One night, Mazzini hears her and thinks he's made a great discovery.

    The movie was amusing, thanks to Eric Blore as a band member who tries to get money from Blynn by saying he's Bird Girl's long lost father, Edward Everett Horton, and Jack Oakie.

    Pons sings Air du Rossignol, Je suis Titania, and the Mad Scene from Lucia. Pons was a smart woman and very fashionable; she was pretty and petite. Her signature role was Lakme, which is not done much today.

    Pons was a true coloratura, the highest soprano voice, and stuck with those roles. She did not have much of a middle voice; real coloraturas don't. She did have an excellent, fast coloratura technique; some of her high notes were better than others. She could be a very exciting singer.

    Like many female singers from that era, her voice was small. But at least she stuck to her repertoire - I mean, Jeanette MacDonald sang Tosca which is ridiculous. She retired in 1973 - I have no idea what she sang at that point.

    This film was a major flop, and Pons' last that wasn't a "concert film." Well, my mother always liked her.
    5bkoganbing

    Bird Girl

    Hitting A New High was the last of 3 films that Lily Pons did under her contract with RKO. As that brief vogue for opera sopranos ended as it began in mid 30s Hollywood, RKO and Pons parted company. She would make guest appearances however in other films in the future, most notably Carnegie Hall.

    In this one the score is a mixture of operatic material with some original score music written by Jimmy McHugh and Harold Adamson. One of the songs I Hit A New High had some success on the pop charts.

    I'm not sure what Lily Pons must have thought of this film. In it she's required to go to Africa as part of an elaborate con game to fool millionaire Edward Everett Horton into thinking he's captured a bird girl who has something like a five octave range. Then it becomes a struggle between Horton and opera impresario Eduardo Ciannelli for her musical services. Jack Oakie is press agent con man who fools Horton who really is quite a dunce in this film.

    It all gets more silly than funny. Hitting A New High did get an Oscar nomination for music scoring.

    I'm sure that Pons though she does display a bit of a flair for comedy here was grateful her Hollywood contract was at an end.
    7richard-1787

    An often very funny movie

    This is an often very funny movie, with something of a hole in the middle of it.

    Lily Pons, though a fine singer and an attractive woman - who didn't photograph well, at least in this picture - did not have the charisma to carry off a movie. If you compare her to Jeannette MacDonald or Grace Moore, her equivalents at MGM and Columbia, you will see what I mean. She isn't helped by the fact that she is given an unsympathetic role. Rather than another replay of the singer who dreams of singing opera and disdains popular music, this movie would have been much better if she had been presented as a singer who wanted to do both, and fight against the prejudice that held that opera singers shouldn't do popular music. The best numbers in this movie are when she does pop music - especially "Hitting a new high" - so her disdain for them doesn't make her attractive to the audience. The staging of the Mad Scene from Lucia di Lammermoor is downright bad, and would have confirmed opera-haters' views of why opera wasn't interesting. She just walks around with her arms extended gazing up at the sky. You would have NO idea what the number, a very dramatic one, is actually about from watching her performance of it in this movie.

    What makes this a fun movie is the character parts - Jack Oakie, Edward Everett Horton, and Eric Blore - who are given really first-class material and a LOT of screen time, with which they do a really first-class job. Oakie and Horton come off as a quirky couple, with Horton as the straight man and Oakie as the guy with all the jokes. With many 1930s musicals you want to delete the dialogue scenes and just focus on the musical numbers. Here, frankly, it would be tempting to eliminate most of the musical numbers and the romantic scenes (which are few) and focus on the scenes with Oakie, Horton, and Blore.

    Though I would save the scene in "Africa" where Pons appears in a lagoon singing to exotic birds. It's the most charming number in the movie, and nicely done.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The film lost considerable money at the box office - $431,000 according to studio records. It was Lily Pons's last film at RKO and she never made another non-concert film.
    • Gaffes
      A Sulphur-Crested Cockatoo is seen in the African jungle when Oogahunga is found. Later on, Mazzini refers to Oogahunga as an "Egyptian Cockatoo". Cockatoos are native to Australia and some islands to its north, and are not found in Africa. A cockatoo is also seen later in Blynn's house as a pet, but this is not unusual, as cockatoos have been imported to the USA and kept as pets for many years.
    • Connexions
      Referenced in The True Adventures of Raoul Walsh (2014)
    • Bandes originales
      I Hit a New High
      (1937)

      Music by Jimmy McHugh (as James McHugh)

      Lyrics by Harold Adamson

      Played during the opening credits

      Sung by Lily Pons and sung and danced by the chorus at the Chez Suzette

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 6 avril 1938 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Français
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Hitting a New High
    • Lieux de tournage
      • RKO Studios - 780 N. Gower Street, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • Société de production
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Budget
      • 727 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      1 heure 25 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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