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IMDbPro

E o Espetáculo Continua

Título original: Show Business
  • 1944
  • Approved
  • 1 h 32 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,4/10
256
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Eddie Cantor, Joan Davis, Nancy Kelly, Constance Moore, and George Murphy in E o Espetáculo Continua (1944)
SlapstickComedyMusicalRomance

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA song-and-dance man and his comic partner undergo romantic ups and downs when they team up with a female duo and transition from burlesque to vaudeville.A song-and-dance man and his comic partner undergo romantic ups and downs when they team up with a female duo and transition from burlesque to vaudeville.A song-and-dance man and his comic partner undergo romantic ups and downs when they team up with a female duo and transition from burlesque to vaudeville.

  • Direção
    • Edwin L. Marin
  • Roteiristas
    • Joseph Quillan
    • Dorothy Bennett
    • Irving Elinson
  • Artistas
    • Eddie Cantor
    • George Murphy
    • Joan Davis
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,4/10
    256
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Edwin L. Marin
    • Roteiristas
      • Joseph Quillan
      • Dorothy Bennett
      • Irving Elinson
    • Artistas
      • Eddie Cantor
      • George Murphy
      • Joan Davis
    • 15Avaliações de usuários
    • 4Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 vitória no total

    Fotos4

    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
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    Ver pôster

    Elenco principal63

    Editar
    Eddie Cantor
    Eddie Cantor
    • Eddie Martin
    George Murphy
    George Murphy
    • George Doane
    Joan Davis
    Joan Davis
    • Joan Mason
    Nancy Kelly
    Nancy Kelly
    • Nancy Gaye
    Constance Moore
    Constance Moore
    • Constance Ford
    Donald Douglas
    Donald Douglas
    • Charlie Lucas
    • (as Don Douglas)
    Gloria Anderson
    • Showgirl
    • (não creditado)
    Frank Baker
    Frank Baker
    • Kelly's Cafe Patron
    • (não creditado)
    Billy Bester
    • Callboy
    • (não creditado)
    Eddie Borden
    Eddie Borden
    • Comic with Banjo
    • (não creditado)
    Buster Brodie
    Buster Brodie
    • Bald Man
    • (não creditado)
    Claire Carleton
    Claire Carleton
    • Nurse
    • (não creditado)
    James Carlisle
    • Audience Member
    • (não creditado)
    Russ Clark
    • Army Doctor
    • (não creditado)
    Dell Clow
    • Page Girl
    • (não creditado)
    Ann Codee
    Ann Codee
    • French Modiste
    • (não creditado)
    Barbara Coleman
    • Showgirl
    • (não creditado)
    James Conaty
    • Nightclub Patron
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Edwin L. Marin
    • Roteiristas
      • Joseph Quillan
      • Dorothy Bennett
      • Irving Elinson
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários15

    6,4256
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    Avaliações em destaque

    6planktonrules

    In hindsight, I wish it had just been about Joan Davis and Eddie Cantor's characters!

    The copy I saw of "Show Business" was very flawed and I hope you can find a better one than the one on YouTube. The picture was scratchy, the sound tinny and whoever posted it stuck a giant watermark across the screen! Even worse is that they removed a blackface segment because it might offend. I personally hate censorship and wish they'd instead given a prologue discussing this scene instead of just removing it.

    The story is about the burlesque singing and dancing team of Eddie and George (Eddie Cantor and George Murphy). Soon they meet up with Joan and Nancy (Joan Davis and Nancy Kelly) and they are so good they're able to move up to vaudeville. Things are just fine until George and Nancy marry. On the day their daughter is born, a STUPID misunderstanding tears them apart and the rest of the film is predictable....as years pass, you know eventually they'll get back together.

    A serious problem for me was that I didn't care about George and Nancy. Their histrionics really took away from what I loved.... Eddie and Joan. They were wonderful together....just like they'd been in previous films. In hindsight, I really wish they film had just been about them and the other two written out of the picture. Worth seeing despite this...but not exactly a must-see picture.
    jimjo1216

    A fun song & dance tale

    SHOW BUSINESS (1944) seems like a rather obscure old film, but it's surprisingly enjoyable. Nothing major, but it's a lot of fun.

    The movie is a breezy tale about entertainers on the old vaudeville circuit (~1910s) and it showcases some classic songs like "It Had To Be You", "Dinah", and "Makin' Whoopee".

    The cast may not be flashy, but they're a delight. The film is anchored by song and dance men George Murphy and Eddie Cantor. The two partners soon meet up with female showbiz duo Constance Moore and Joan Davis. There's singing, dancing, comedy bits, romance, and some dramatic beats along the way.

    (Interestingly, the principal cast all play characters sharing their first names.)

    I am not familiar with Joan Davis, but she's very funny as a wisecracking Eve Arden-type. Eddie Cantor plays the comedic sidekick role here, and I think I enjoyed him more than in his earlier starring vehicles. His comedy shtick is actually pretty sharp and he tones down some of his characteristic bug-eyed stuff. Cantor and Davis make an excellent comedy pair.

    Eddie Cantor seemed to be in his comfort zone, essentially playing himself, an old-time vaudevillian hopping up and down a stage. Cantor produced the film, which leads one to suspect he might have been retracing his own steps through the glory days of vaudeville. "Makin' Whoopee", sung by Cantor in the film, had actually been popularized by Cantor himself in a Florenz Ziegfeld production.

    Leading lady Constance Moore was not a typical fresh-faced beauty, but I thought she was lovely. She reminded me vaguely of other actresses but I'd never seen her in a film before. I'll have to keep an eye out for her.

    I had low expectations for this B-musical, but I was pleasantly surprised. Give it a look.
    7bkoganbing

    Nice Vaudeville Story

    Any film that gets Eddie Cantor to revive Making Whoopee and I Don't Want To Get Well is one worth seeing even with the skimpy plot.

    Show Business is the story of a vaudeville act, how they got together and their trials and tribulations from the turn of the last century until the Twenties. It was right after talking pictures came in that vaudeville began slowly to decline.

    This was an era that Eddie Cantor knew well, it was the kind of Show Business he cut his performing teeth with before hitting the big time on Broadway in the Ziegfeld Follies. The quartet is Cantor, George Murphy, Constance Moore, and Joan Davis.

    Davis chases Cantor through out the film which is ironic because she got him in the real life. It was on this film that they had a discreet affair that was well known in performing circles, but the public never found out about lest Cantor's family image be ruined. Davis's comedy here and elsewhere was the physical sort of stuff that Lucille Ball so popularized on television. Davis too had her biggest success in her television series I Married Joan. She died way too young.

    Murphy and Moore have an on, off, and on again romance with Nancy Kelly doing her best to break them up. Murphy's big number is the old standard It Had To Be You which at the time was enjoying a revival with a best selling duet record by Dick Haymes and Helen Forrest.

    No original music for Show Business, just some good old standards. Unfortunately there is a blackface number that all four of the leads are involved in. Cantor did blackface though it never was THE centerpiece of his stage persona like it was for rival Al Jolson.

    Show Business is a pleasant afternoon's diversion about the days of vaudeville. And what days they were.
    7Bunuel1976

    SHOW BUSINESS (Edwin L. Marin, 1944) ***

    Another Leslie Halliwell favourite, this period musical follows the pattern of several others of its ilk – the career from obscurity to popularity, hitting the skids and the climb back to the top of a burlesque/vaudeville troupe (apparently, the former is deemed a low- grade art form and despised by the latter, but there is little to differentiate them in this film and elsewhere!). Incidentally, co-star George Murphy – whom the fall from grace hits the hardest here – had also featured in the very similar (also comparable quality-wise) FOR ME AND MY GAL (1942), where it was Gene Kelly who got on the wrong end of fame and fortune.

    The movie under review was actually instigated by comedian Eddie Cantor (who personally produced it): he had had a successful run of star vehicles with Samuel Goldwyn in the 1930s, followed by a couple of well- regarded efforts for other studios later on – Warners' star-studded THANK YOUR LUCKY STARS (1943) and this one, made over at RKO (its success even prompted a sequel, named after one of Cantor's best-known tunes i.e. IF YOU KNEW SUSIE {1948}). There is actually an autobiographical element to SHOW BUSINESS, since the character he plays obtains his greatest hit with Cantor's very own "Makin' Whoopee" (which inspired his 1930 star vehicle)! Also on hand is comedienne Joan Davis, whose initial disdain for Cantor grows into a true and almost protective love – frequently breaking the fourth wall to assure the viewer that she cannot help herself; their Cleopatra routine is a hoot!

    The film encompasses comedy, songs (notably the standard "It Had To Be You", sung – either alternately or concurrently – by Murphy and love interest Nancy Kelly), romance (the latter broken up by his former partner, in both senses of the word) and nostalgia and, while neither the classic Halliwell deems it to be (conversely, Leonard Maltin rated it a more modest **1/2) nor Cantor's most representative work (that would be ROMAN SCANDALS {1933}), there is no doubt that it offers solid entertainment throughout and, as stated in an after-credits title-card, was conceived primarily as wartime escapism for American audiences, be they at home or abroad fighting.
    8alicefinklestein

    Good old fashioned fun...

    And wit like you would never see nowadays.

    The story of a four person act, two men Eddie Martin (Eddie Cantor) and George Doane (George Murphy) and two women Joan Mason (Joan Davis) and Constance Ford (Constance Moore) (lot of thought evidently went into those names), their lives, their loves, their highs, their lows and some very entertaining performances. Particularly from Joan Davis who gets all the fabulous one-liners.

    There a some classic songs in there too, "Making Whoopee" and "It Had To Be You." All in all, a very entertaining way to spend a slow Saturday afternoon.

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    Enredo

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    • Curiosidades
      Bert Gordon, George Jessel, Pat Rooney and Gene Sheldon were definitely filmed in a sequence which was cut before the release of the movie. Also in studio records, but not seen in the film, are Matthew 'Stymie' Beard (Harold), Billy Bester (Call Boy), Marietta Canty (Maid), Don Dillaway (Gambler), Ralph Dunn (Taxi Driver), Edmund Glover (Gambler), Harry Harvey Jr. (Page Boy), Russell Hopton (Gambler), Sam Lufkin (Waiter on Stage), Jerry Maren (Midget), Charles Marsh (Man Eating Peanuts), Chef Milani (Head Waiter), Bert Moorhouse (Desk Clerk), Forbes Murray (Director), William J. O'Brien (Peanut Gag Man), and Joseph Vitale (Caesar).
    • Citações

      Cleopatra: Do-eth thou-eth loveth me-eth?

      Marc Anthony: Yeth!

    • Conexões
      Edited from A Ponte de Waterloo (1931)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      You May Not Remember
      (1944)

      Music by Ben Oakland

      Lyrics by George Jessel

      Performed by Nancy Kelly (uncredited)

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    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 8 de dezembro de 1944 (Suécia)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Show Business
    • Locações de filme
      • RKO Studios - 780 N. Gower Street, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Califórnia, EUA(Studio)
    • Empresa de produção
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 32 minutos
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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