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IMDbPro

Hollywood en folie

Titre original : Variety Girl
  • 1947
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 33min
NOTE IMDb
6,3/10
535
MA NOTE
Gary Cooper, William Holden, Alan Ladd, Veronica Lake, Burt Lancaster, Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, Ray Milland, Barbara Stanwyck, Paulette Goddard, Joan Caulfield, Cass Daley, Billy De Wolfe, Barry Fitzgerald, Mary Hatcher, Dorothy Lamour, Gail Russell, Olga San Juan, Lizabeth Scott, and Sonny Tufts in Hollywood en folie (1947)
ParodySlapstickComedyMusical

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAlmost everyone under contract to Paramount Pictures at the time make cameos or perform songs, with particularly large amounts of screen time featuring Bob Hope and Bing Crosby.Almost everyone under contract to Paramount Pictures at the time make cameos or perform songs, with particularly large amounts of screen time featuring Bob Hope and Bing Crosby.Almost everyone under contract to Paramount Pictures at the time make cameos or perform songs, with particularly large amounts of screen time featuring Bob Hope and Bing Crosby.

  • Réalisation
    • George Marshall
  • Scénario
    • Monte Brice
    • William Cottrell
    • Edmund L. Hartmann
  • Casting principal
    • Mary Hatcher
    • Olga San Juan
    • DeForest Kelley
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,3/10
    535
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • George Marshall
    • Scénario
      • Monte Brice
      • William Cottrell
      • Edmund L. Hartmann
    • Casting principal
      • Mary Hatcher
      • Olga San Juan
      • DeForest Kelley
    • 10avis d'utilisateurs
    • 2avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos13

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    + 5
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    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Mary Hatcher
    Mary Hatcher
    • Catherine Brown…
    Olga San Juan
    Olga San Juan
    • Amber La Vonne
    DeForest Kelley
    DeForest Kelley
    • Bob Kirby
    Frank Ferguson
    Frank Ferguson
    • R.J. O'Connell
    Glenn Tryon
    Glenn Tryon
    • Bill Farris
    Nella Walker
    Nella Walker
    • Mrs. Webster
    Torben Meyer
    Torben Meyer
    • Andre - Brown Derby Headwaiter
    Jack Norton
    Jack Norton
    • Busboy at Brown Derby
    Elaine Riley
    Elaine Riley
    • Cashier (Brown Derby)
    Charles Victor
    • Mr. O'Connell's Assistant
    Gus Taute
    • O'Connell's Assistant's Assistant
    Harry Hayden
    • Manager - Grauman's Chinese Theatre
    Bing Crosby
    Bing Crosby
    • Bing Crosby
    Bob Hope
    Bob Hope
    • Bob Hope
    Gary Cooper
    Gary Cooper
    • Gary Cooper
    Ray Milland
    Ray Milland
    • Ray Milland
    Alan Ladd
    Alan Ladd
    • Alan Ladd
    Barbara Stanwyck
    Barbara Stanwyck
    • Barbara Stanwyck
    • Réalisation
      • George Marshall
    • Scénario
      • Monte Brice
      • William Cottrell
      • Edmund L. Hartmann
    • 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

    1Cajun-4

    Cheap looking tour of Paramount Studios.

    There's plenty of stars in this homage to Variety clubs international but precious little entertainment. A poor script and shoddy production values make this movie look as though it was shot over weekends on whatever sets happened to be available. Painful to sit through at times with dated comedy routines that were probably not very funny even at the time. Of the performers Pearl Bailey does a not bad musical number, and Bing Crosby and Bob Hope come the closest to being funny.
    8HotToastyRag

    The best variety film out there

    You know those lousy movies that were basically taped variety shows for WWII soldiers, with tons of cameos and no actual story? Well, Variety Girl is not one of those movies. Technically, it is, but since it does have a story, and it's the best variety film I've ever seen, I hesitate to lump it among all the bad ones. The film starts out by telling the story of a baby being left in a movie theater. The theater executives adopted the girl and provided a good education for her, but they haven't been active in her life. So, when she sets up a screen test in Hollywood, the big wigs who are her adoptive fathers, don't recognize her! While the sweet and talented Olga San Juan hopes for a Hollywood break, the conniving Mary Hatcher tries to horn in on her opportunity. Checking in with Olga's name, she weasels her way into the screen test instead. Which girl will make the grade, and which girl will get the guy, DeForest Kelly? You'll have to watch this barrel of laughs to find out.

    Sprinkled in among Olga and Mary's tour of Hollywood are cameos from Gary Cooper, Barbara Stanwyck, William Holden, Ray Milland, Alan Ladd, Paulette Goddard, Lizabeth Scott, Burt Lancaster, Joan Caulfield, Sonny Tufts, Dorothy Lamour, Sterling Hayden, Barry Fitzgerald, Howard Da Silva, William Bendix, Veronica Lake, Robert Preston, Gail Russell, Macdonald Carey, Billy De Wolfe, Mona Freeman, Patric Knowles, Cass Daley, Cecil Kellaway, Pearl Bailey, Spike Jones, Mitchell Leisen, Frank Faylen, Cecil B. DeMille, and Frank Butler-who hilariously criticizes a set of dialogue only to be told that he wrote it a few years earlier!

    Bing Crosby and Bob Hope have pretty lengthy and funny cameos as t hey both help the girls break into show business. This movie is hilarious; even if you take a popcorn break during some of the songs or skits that last a little too long, it's still a ton of fun. Mary Hatcher tries to get Cecil B. DeMille's attention at a restaurant, so she pretends to get a phone call right in front of his table so she can rattle off emotional dialogue. Cecil and his lunch companion Frank Butler take bets as to which impersonation she'll do next, from Bette Davis to Gene Autrey's horse!
    6jeffhanna3

    Upbeat "40's Hollywood" atmosphere

    For those who enjoy plenty of upbeat "40's Hollywood glamour" atmosphere, good musical numbers, and seeing dozens of stars of the mid 1940's, "Variety Girl" is a pleasant time-passer.

    Another reviewer here left a very good review, but got their people badly mixed-up in their final paragraph. It is not Mary Hatcher, but the manically energetic Olga San Juan, in fur coat and sunglasses, who tries hard to get the attention of a famous director in the Brown Derby restaurant. The director is not Cecil B. DeMille, but Mitchell Leisen.

    Mary Hatcher was gorgeous, a very good actress, and had a lovely voice which could range from Swing to operatic. Perhaps she didn't go far in movies because she looked and sang like the twin sister of Kathryn Grayson, a major star at the time, and Hollywood didn't need two almost identical beauties with operatic voices.
    8bkoganbing

    All Hail the Variety Clubs

    I've said this often enough. There is no way I will ever give a film like this a bad review. Just an unregenerate stargazer I guess.

    The demise of the studio system makes this kind of film impossible now. You couldn't possibly afford to pay all the talented people here what they would be worth on the open market. But when they're all working at Paramount studios at the time, such films are possible.

    The thin plot of this film is that young Mary Hatcher who back as an infant was left in a movie theater and adopted by the managers of several theaters. She became a project for them and the cause of why they founded the Variety Club Charitable Foundation.

    Mary's grown up now and has aspirations to be an actress. She goes to Paramount where Frank Ferguson is now a big wig. She and a goofy friend Olga San Juan get everyone confused as to who is who. Especially young DeForest Kelley who is a Paramount talent scout.

    Both Hatcher and Kelley were pretty unknown at the time. Hatcher had in fact come from Broadway and the original production of Oklahoma where she had replaced Joan Roberts in the lead. This was DeForest Kelley and it was only his second film. But I seem to remember he got a big break a little less than 20 years later playing a futuristic doctor on some science fiction show.

    But this is really just an excuse to have all the Paramount name talent strut their stuff. One interesting sequence was one where Alan Ladd hijacks an airliner and in the midst of a dramatic scene bursts into song with Dorothy Lamour about the capital city of Florida, Tallahassee. Ladd had a pleasant, if not great singing voice and I'm sure he loved the opportunity to spoof his own hardboiled image.

    Gary Cooper made an obligatory appearance and this turned out to be his farewell appearance with Paramount, the studio that discovered and developed him.

    Of course heading the cast were the two that really kept Paramount in the black in those days, Bing Crosby and Bob Hope. Bing was in the midst of a five year run as the nation's number one box office attraction. And in 1949 he would be succeeded by one Bob Hope. They have a duet called Harmony in which the rest of the cast joins in at the finale.

    Curiously enough Bing only recorded Tallahassee and with the Andrews Sisters. Why he and Hope didn't do Harmony on record is a mystery to me.

    Just about everyone on the lot but Betty Hutton got into this one. I wonder where she was?
    4Varlaam

    An all-star tribute to the philanthropic Variety Clubs International

    ... and that's as flimsy an excuse for a parade of stars as there ever was. This one seems more forced and artificial than such films normally do.

    Many of the stars have little or nothing to do in their cameos: Barbara Stanwyck, Burt Lancaster, Diana Lynn, and especially Robert Preston. Perhaps they're the lucky ones, given the limp nature of the script. They might have wound up like Spike Jones -- he and his City Slickers are far more obnoxious here than they were in "Thank Your Lucky Stars" (1943). Or the pitiable Alan Ladd, singing about that greatest of cities, Tallahassee, Florida. Seriously.

    The occasional bright spots include Paulette Goddard wearing soapsuds, and Ray Milland hiding his telephone in an overhead light fixture, à la "The Lost Weekend".

    I was also keen to see the rarely glimpsed, grey-haired Glenn Tryon, the male lead in 1928's magnificent "Lonesome", one of the final great achievements of the American silent film. "Lonesome" is comparable in some ways to King Vidor's "The Crowd", but is much less frequently discussed.

    I think few would argue if I were to say that "Variety Girl" is for completists only.

    Caveat emptor: This film's recent video release in the Bob Hope Collection has the George Pal Technicolor sequence in black and white.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Under contract to different record labels at the time - Bing Crosby at Decca and Bob Hope at Capitol - the duo could not produce for the marketplace a disc of their specialty number from the film, "Harmony" (music by Jimmy Van Heusen, lyrics by Johnny Burke). Decca, taking another tune from the score, united Bing with his frequent recording partners, The Andrews Sisters, for a best-selling single of the jaunty city song, "Tallahassee" (music and lyrics by Frank Loesser), a ditty introduced in the picture by Dorothy Lamour and the usually non-singing Alan Ladd. On a Capitol 78, Johnny Mercer teamed with The King Cole Trio for their take on "Harmony."
    • Citations

      Bing Crosby: Go away, or I'll beat you to a pulp with my Oscar.

    • Versions alternatives
      Although the George Pal Puppetoon sequence was originally presented in Technicolor, most extant prints of "Variety Girl" now show this segment in black-and-white.
    • Connexions
      Referenced in Flesh (1968)
    • Bandes originales
      Your Heart Calling Mine
      Written by Frank Loesser

      Sung by Mary Hatcher with Spike Jones and His Orchestra

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    FAQ14

    • How long is Variety Girl?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 28 mai 1948 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Variety Girl
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Grauman's Chinese Theater - 6925 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis
    • Société de production
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 33 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Gary Cooper, William Holden, Alan Ladd, Veronica Lake, Burt Lancaster, Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, Ray Milland, Barbara Stanwyck, Paulette Goddard, Joan Caulfield, Cass Daley, Billy De Wolfe, Barry Fitzgerald, Mary Hatcher, Dorothy Lamour, Gail Russell, Olga San Juan, Lizabeth Scott, and Sonny Tufts in Hollywood en folie (1947)
    Lacune principale
    By what name was Hollywood en folie (1947) officially released in India in English?
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