Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaSent by her employers on an errand to the home of the wealthy Mrs. Vincent, Irene O'Dare meets Don, a friend of Mrs. Vincent's son Bob. Attracted to Irene, Don decides to invest some money i... Leggi tuttoSent by her employers on an errand to the home of the wealthy Mrs. Vincent, Irene O'Dare meets Don, a friend of Mrs. Vincent's son Bob. Attracted to Irene, Don decides to invest some money in Bob's latest venture, the "Madame Lucy" dress shop, in order to give Irene a job there a... Leggi tuttoSent by her employers on an errand to the home of the wealthy Mrs. Vincent, Irene O'Dare meets Don, a friend of Mrs. Vincent's son Bob. Attracted to Irene, Don decides to invest some money in Bob's latest venture, the "Madame Lucy" dress shop, in order to give Irene a job there as a model. She is very successful and Bob also becomes attracted to her. Smith, the manage... Leggi tutto
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Candidato a 1 Oscar
- 2 vittorie e 1 candidatura in totale
- Dancer in Harlem Version of Alice Blue Gown Number
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Diner Patron
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Towards the end of this movie, Ray Milland's character discovers Anna Neagle's Irene dancing by herself, lost in thought and emotion. He and we watch, unperceived by Irene, and the dance was an unexpected delight. While the choreography could have used more variation (certain moves are repeated too much, and some of them have her shoulders up more than is ideal), Anna N. proves herself a graceful, expressive dancer; I hope to see more of her dancing, if it exists in films. The beginning of the dance also uses subtle slow-motion to good effect, which it occurred to me I haven't seen often, if at all, in musicals from this era. I wonder why that wasn't used more, as it would seem to be a relatively easy effect to employ. Anyway, I recommend IRENE, and look forward to taking my own recommendation to see the rest of it soon.
However unlike Matthews, Neagle came over to try her luck on the other side of the pond. Irene was one of the ones she did her in a deal with RKO that also included her husband, producer/director Herbert Wilcox.
Irene was a successful musical comedy that was updated from post World War I to pre World War II America. On Broadway it had a run of 675 performances during the 1919-1921 seasons. It concerns a young Irish working class girl who gets innocently trapped in a fashion store publicity stunt by Ray Milland who's smitten with her. Store manager Roland Young aids and abets.
The film is makes the twenty year transition well. Most of the score is heard in the background or as show numbers. The two songs that Neagle does, Irene and Alice Blue Gown were the big hits of the original show.
Irene is a pleasant enough film, it's too bad that the American movie public didn't see more of Anna Neagle.
The basic story is the same as in this film, and similar to the 1926 film of the same name.
Irene O'Dare (Anna Neagle), on an errand for her employers, goes to the home of Mrs. Vincent (Billie Burke) and meets Don (Ray Milland), a friend of Mrs. Vincent's son Bob (Alan Marshal).
Don suggests that she try out as a model in the "Madame Lucy" dress shop. For good measure, he invests in the shop himself. However, Irene isn't sure she wants the job after the store manager makes a pass. Don fires the manager and puts in another one, Smith (Roland Young), who visits Irene at her home and asks her to work for him.
Irene is a smash hit as a model, and Smith assigns her the most beautiful gown to wear at Mrs. Vincent's charity ball. Unfortunately, some Irish stew wrecks it. Irene goes anyway, wearing a stunning blue gown that belonged to her mother, and knocks everyone's socks off.
A guest at the ball, Princess Minetti, believes Irene is related to one Lady O'Dare, and Irene doesn't correct her.
Smith decides Irene is perfect for a publicity campaign to put the dress shop on the map. He sets Irene up in a Park Avenue suite, passing her off as the niece of Lady O'Dare. This way, she will be invited to social functions and wear the shop's beautiful gowns.
When a jealous fellow model tells a newspaper columnist that Irene is really shanty Irish, all hell breaks loose.
This is a nice musical, and Anna Neagle is lovely. She was an enormous stage and screen star in Britain and even has a street named after her. She did musicals and drama up until 1985. For 15 years, she was in the top 10 of biggest British box office stars. In this she dances, sings, and acts beautifully and looks wonderful in all of the gowns.
Good cast, well directed, a pleasant musical, and a good chance to see Anna Neagle, a British treasure.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizStuart Robertson, who played 'Freddie, the Bandleader', was the brother of Anna Neagle.
- Citazioni
Donald 'Don' Marshall: I understand discretion is your middle name.
Bretherton, the Butler: Mr. Marshall, if butlers told all they knew, society would be a shambles.
- Curiosità sui creditiThe credits are presented by marionette figures of Anna Neagle and Ray Milland.
- Versioni alternativeThe "Alice Blue Gown" sequence was filmed in color, but on most TV prints, it is shown in black-and-white.
- ConnessioniVersion of Irene (1926)
- Colonne sonoreCastle of Dreams
(1940) (uncredited)
Music and Lyrics by Harry Tierney and Joseph McCarthy
Played and sung during opening credits
Played and sung at a nightclub by an unidentifed group
Played as part of the score throughout
I più visti
Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- Älskar - älskar inte...
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Manhattan, New York, New York, Stati Uniti(establishing shots - archive footage)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 578.000 USD (previsto)
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 41 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1