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Eravamo sette fratelli

Titolo originale: The Seven Little Foys
  • 1955
  • Approved
  • 1h 33min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,7/10
1691
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Eravamo sette fratelli (1955)
BiografiaCommediaDrammaFamigliaMusicale

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAfter the young wife of vaudevillian Eddie Foy passes away, he incorporates their seven children into the act and takes it on the road.After the young wife of vaudevillian Eddie Foy passes away, he incorporates their seven children into the act and takes it on the road.After the young wife of vaudevillian Eddie Foy passes away, he incorporates their seven children into the act and takes it on the road.

  • Regia
    • Melville Shavelson
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Melville Shavelson
    • Jack Rose
  • Star
    • Bob Hope
    • Milly Vitale
    • George Tobias
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,7/10
    1691
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Melville Shavelson
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Melville Shavelson
      • Jack Rose
    • Star
      • Bob Hope
      • Milly Vitale
      • George Tobias
    • 16Recensioni degli utenti
    • 12Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Candidato a 1 Oscar
      • 1 candidatura in totale

    Foto11

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    Interpreti principali64

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    Bob Hope
    Bob Hope
    • Eddie Foy
    Milly Vitale
    Milly Vitale
    • Madeleine Morando Foy
    George Tobias
    George Tobias
    • Barney Green
    Angela Clarke
    Angela Clarke
    • Clara Morando
    Herbert Heyes
    Herbert Heyes
    • Judge
    Richard Shannon
    Richard Shannon
    • Stage Manager
    Billy Gray
    Billy Gray
    • Bryan Lincoln Foy, as a Teen
    Lee Erickson
    • Charley Foy
    Paul De Rolf
    • Richard Foy
    Lydia Reed
    Lydia Reed
    • Mary Foy
    Linda Bennett
    • Madeleine Foy
    Jimmy Baird
    • Eddie Foy Jr.
    Tommy Duran
    • Irving Foy
    James Cagney
    James Cagney
    • George M. Cohan
    Charley Foy
    Charley Foy
    • Narration by
    • (voce)
    Hy Anzell
    Hy Anzell
    • Dresser at 'Iroquois'
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Joe Bassett
    • Grip
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Oliver Blake
    Oliver Blake
    • Santa Claus
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Melville Shavelson
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Melville Shavelson
      • Jack Rose
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti16

    6,71.6K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    4planktonrules

    '...as far as the audiences knew, we were one big, happy family...'

    'I love him when he's angry...and he's angry all the time'--Mrs. Foy in "The Seven Little Foys" I had a hard time with this movie. And, as I read through the reviews, I was actually rather surprised that more reviewers weren't appalled by the leading character. Kentrasmussen noticed this but most of the rest of the reviews never really get to the problem I had with the film--that the main character seemed about as unlikable as possible. It's a shame, as there are things to like about the film--but without a lead who is likable, there really isn't much reason to see this one.

    The film purports to being the story of Eddie Foy and his children--who, collectively, were known as 'Eddie Foy and His Seven Little Foys' on stage. How close Bob Hope's portrayal of Foy's personality is the real Foy, I have no idea. But, as I said above, if this is the real Foy, he wasn't a particularly nice or likable guy. No,...he's a jerk.

    When the film begins, Foy's been on the vaudeville circuit for some time. What the film never mentions is that he had already been married and this wife died. And, for a decade, he apparently had a common law relationship with another woman who also died. The film instead picks up much later--just before his second marriage. At this time, Foy is a self-absorbed guy who met his future wife but has zero interest in marrying her. He only does so later in order to get to go to Broadway--a very strange reason to marry someone. Over the course of the next 20-odd years (it seemed like far less in the movie), Foy leaves his ever-pregnant wife at home while he travels the country performing on stage and becoming famous. According to the movie, he is almost never home and is, at best, a very distant father. Despite saying several times in the film that he doesn't like or want kids, the couple has seven kids. However, the wife dies and Foy decides to incorporate the kids into his act--otherwise he's either stuck at home with them (God forbid) or will be forced to give them to someone else. During this time on the road with his kids, he continues to be rather distant from his kids. Eventually there is a schmaltzy ending which seems to come out of no where--as he had been thoroughly horrible as a father.

    The plot sucked. I'll be honest. However, Bob Hope surprised me in this one. While I didn't care for his comedy (Foy was a dancer/comedian), I was impressed by his dancing. While not exactly Fred Astaire, it was quite good. And, the production values in the film were quite nice. I am just surprised that they either did just make Foy nice (as Hollywood OFTEN made creeps seem nice in the old days) or make an entirely fictional story with a nicer and more sympathetic leading character. Flawed but mildly interesting.
    SanDiego

    Companion film to Cagney's Yankee Doodle Dandy.

    Companion film to Jimmy Cagney's Yankee Doodle Dandy, with Bob Hope as Broadway's Eddie Foy. Jimmy Cagney reprises his Yankee Doodle role as Foy's friendly rival George M. Cohan in a spectacular dance sequence. A far cry from his lighter other comedies, Bob Hope has never been better. Great for anyone seeking a great family entertainment or a colorful musical.
    9edwagreen

    "7 Little Foys" Are Great and So Is the Picture

    ***1/2 for this Bob Hope vehicle made in 1955.

    The biography details the life of song and dance man Eddie Foy. Hope has the usual right wit and sarcastic blend to produce a wonderful performance. His dancing is exactly the right step as well.

    He meets and marries a ballerina played by Millie Vitale. The children start coming real fast. Each time, Vitale's sister, a tough-looking strong woman named Clara, announces: "We're pregnant!"

    7 little Foys enter the world. Eddie is too busy in his show business career and is rarely home. Go know that Vitale's cough is more serious than a cold. One night he arrives home to the news that his beloved wife had died during the day. Stricken with disbelief and sadness, Eddie vows to keep the family together and engages the children to appear in his act.

    Meanwhile, Aunt Clara schemes to have Eddie declared unsuitable so that she can gain control of the children.

    A fine musical and dance sequence with James Cagney reprising his role of George M. Cowan is shown in this delightful film.
    theowinthrop

    Hope's quest and Cagney's sequel and a tragic scene not lost

    This film precedes BEAU JAMES by two years, and can be seen as a kind of warm-up for that Hope biography. As I mentioned in my comment there, Hope was hoping to find a film property that he could demonstrate his dramatic abilities in, so that he could possibly get a nod for an Oscar nomination. So the two biographies and the serious toned THAT CERTAIN FEELING have a certain individuality among Hope's comedies and films missing in the others.

    Eddie Foy Sr. was one of the great comics of his era. His career was actually older than that of his friend and rival George M. Cohan, for Cohan was born in 1872 and Foy was already a travelling vaudevillian at that time. In fact he would be involved in a famous western event in 1881. Playing shows in Tombstone, in the Arizona territory, Foy came afoul of Ike Clanton and his gang, and was almost killed by them while on stage. The incident is suggested in John Ford's MY DARLING CLEMENTINE when Alan Mowbray (as a windy Victorian actor) is threatened by the Clantons. In the film GUNFIGHT AT THE O.K. CORRALL, the local Tombstone theatre has posters up for Foy's performance. However the director of that Paramount film did not think of having Hope perform a cameo in the Lancaster-Douglas film as Foy.

    THE SEVEN LITTLE FOYS follows Foys personal life, and how he allows his professional interests (tours, bookings) to keep him from the woman he loved and married - and whom he loses when she prematurely dies while he is on tour. His sister-in-law (the wife and her sister are Italians) has never liked Foy. The death of the wife leaves Foy with his seven kids, but his sister-in-law wants him to give up his career, and watch the kids grow up. He doesn't want to do so, so he decides to put the kids into his act. The problem: the kids can't act, sing, or dance like their old man can. Still he perserveres, and the act becomes a success because of it's very awfulness (it's so comically bad, it's good). But the sister-in-law tries to take the kids away from Foy by legal means, leading to a court scene.

    Cagney appears as Cohan at a Friar's Club roast for Foy (their entertainer of the year). The four minute scene includes a graceful soft shoe involving the two troupers Cagney and Hope. It is a wonderful moment in the film. And the film, as a dramatic comedy, does hold up well. Given time, perhaps Hope could have found a suitable film for an Oscar nomination, but he was a busy man, and he did not have the time.

    One final point. This month was the centennial for the burning of the steamboat GENERAL SLOCUM, the worst disaster in the history of New York City before September 11, 2001. The SLOCUM killed 1031 people by burning or drowning. It got into movie history at the start of the film MANHATTAN MELODRAMA (best recalled for the first pairing of William Powell and Myrna Loy, and for the fact that John Dillinger was shot down by FBI men after leaving his secret location to see Myrna Loy's performance). The SLOCUM sequence is grisly well done in that 1934 film. But seven months before the SLOCUM Disaster, the Iroquois Theatre fire in Chicago killed six hundred people. It was the worst theatre fire in American history. Eddie Foy Sr. was playing in MR. BLUEBEARD in the theatre that day, and helped rescue many or the audience by calming them down. Although not much of the disaster is shown, it does appear (the only time I am aware of that it appears at all) in this film, THE SEVEN LITTLE FOYS.
    7Bunuel1976

    THE SEVEN LITTLE FOYS (Melville Shavelson, 1955) ***

    This is underrated as both a Bob Hope vehicle and a musical biopic: even if it follows the basic path of all such films (the struggle to achieve success followed by the pitfalls of celebrity, not forgetting the obligatory romance and the equally inevitable tragedy), it's very capably mounted – with the script even garnering an Oscar nomination. The star is in very fine form here, balancing characterization with his traditional banter; Milly Vitale is radiant as his wife who bears him seven children and then dies. Since Foy's only ever known showbiz, he opts to drag them all into his act! Incidentally, one of the kids (Bryan) grew up to be a film-maker himself but was mainly noted as a producer with a penchant for the noir genre!

    Even so, THE SEVEN LITTLE FOYS is perhaps best-known for a guest appearance by James Cagney, reprising his Oscar-winning role of George M. Cohan from YANKEE DOODLE DANDY (1942) – where, incidentally, Foy was portrayed by his real life son, Eddie Jr; interestingly, George Tobias played Cohan's manager in that earlier film and Foy's here! Anyway, Hope and Cagney's one scene together – which culminates in a dancing duel/duet – is not merely the picture's undeniable highlight but pure cinema magic in and of itself where two top movie stars incarnate a couple of great vaudevillians strutting their stuff. As with a handful of other Hope titles I own, the film has unaccountably fallen into the Public Domain despite being a major studio production, but the copy I acquired thankfully maintains remarkably vibrant colors throughout.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      James Cagney won an Oscar for playing Broadway producer George M. Cohan in Ribalta di gloria (1942). He agreed to play Cohan again in this film on condition that he would not be paid for the role. He did the role as a tribute to Eddie Foy, who had generously provided occasional meals for struggling young actors, including Cagney, in 1920s New York.
    • Citazioni

      Eddie Foy: Father, I'm Eddie Foy, did my family get here yet? You know. The seven kids.

      Episcopal Minister: Mr. Foy, You're Catholic aren't you?

      Eddie Foy: Oh sure.

      Episcopal Minister: You're very welcome, but this is the Episcopal Church.

      Eddie Foy: Oh. I'm kind of a stranger in town, where is the Catholic Church?

      Episcopal Minister: We're not supposed to give out that kind of information... but I believe it's around the corner.

      Eddie Foy: Oh. Thanks.

    • Connessioni
      Edited into Your Afternoon Movie: Seven Little Foys (2023)
    • Colonne sonore
      I'm the Greatest Father Of Them All
      (uncredited)

      Written by William Jerome, Eddie Foy and Joseph J. Lilley

      Sung and Danced by Bob Hope and The Seven Little Foys

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 31 maggio 1955 (Romania)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • The Seven Little Foys
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti(Studio)
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Hope Enterprises
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 33 minuti

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