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George White's Scandals

  • 1934
  • Passed
  • 1h 20m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
118
YOUR RATING
Jimmy Durante, Alice Faye, and Rudy Vallee in George White's Scandals (1934)
ComedyMusicalRomance

Opening with a credit line that reads "Entire production conceived, created and directed by George White," a film evolves where the only plot line is a thin backstage romance between Jimmy M... Read allOpening with a credit line that reads "Entire production conceived, created and directed by George White," a film evolves where the only plot line is a thin backstage romance between Jimmy Martin and Kitty Donnelly in and around a dozen or more sketches, revues, black-outs and si... Read allOpening with a credit line that reads "Entire production conceived, created and directed by George White," a film evolves where the only plot line is a thin backstage romance between Jimmy Martin and Kitty Donnelly in and around a dozen or more sketches, revues, black-outs and singing and dancing turns. Made before the birth of the production code, reviewers of the da... Read all

  • Directors
    • Thornton Freeland
    • Harry Lachman
    • George White
  • Writers
    • George White
    • Jack Yellen
    • Irving Caesar
  • Stars
    • Rudy Vallee
    • Jimmy Durante
    • Alice Faye
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    118
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Thornton Freeland
      • Harry Lachman
      • George White
    • Writers
      • George White
      • Jack Yellen
      • Irving Caesar
    • Stars
      • Rudy Vallee
      • Jimmy Durante
      • Alice Faye
    • 7User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Photos48

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    Top cast99+

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    Rudy Vallee
    Rudy Vallee
    • Jimmy Martin
    Jimmy Durante
    Jimmy Durante
    • Happy McGillicuddy
    Alice Faye
    Alice Faye
    • Kitty Donnelly…
    Adrienne Ames
    Adrienne Ames
    • Barbara Loraine
    Gregory Ratoff
    Gregory Ratoff
    • Nicholas Mitwoch
    Cliff Edwards
    Cliff Edwards
    • Stew Hart
    Dixie Dunbar
    Dixie Dunbar
    • Patsy Day
    George White
    George White
    • George White
    Gertrude Michael
    Gertrude Michael
    • Miss Lee
    Warren Hymer
    Warren Hymer
    • Pete Pandos - Greek Wrestler
    Thomas E. Jackson
    Thomas E. Jackson
    • Al Burke
    • (as Thomas Jackson)
    Armand Kaliz
    Armand Kaliz
    • Count Dekker
    Roger Gray
    Roger Gray
    • Sailor Brown
    • (as Roger Grey)
    William Bailey
    William Bailey
    • Harold Bestry
    George Irving
    George Irving
    • John R. Loraine
    Edward LeSaint
    Edward LeSaint
    • Judge O'Neill
    • (as Ed LeSaint)
    Eunice Coleman
    • Wife in King Henry VIII sketch
    Martha Merrill
    • Wife in King Henry VIII sketch
    • Directors
      • Thornton Freeland
      • Harry Lachman
      • George White
    • Writers
      • George White
      • Jack Yellen
      • Irving Caesar
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews7

    6.1118
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    Featured reviews

    6rhoda-9

    The Dog Lovers' Favourite

    If you love cute dogs, don't on any account miss a chance to see this picture for the number in which THREE men (Durante, Vallee, and Edwards) try to pick up girls with the trusty device of the cute dog. In "My Dog Loves Your Dog" each man point out to a girl that his dog is very fond of the girl's dog, so why don't they follow their pets' example! (Not such a bad idea, when one considers the number of couples who have broken up because of a pet, so it's great if things can go right from the start.) The song is rather babyish, but it is very sweet because it creates the idea that the reason the woman should take the man is that he will offer her doglike devotion (but not in a drippy way, in a lighthearted way--Rudy Vallee sings to Alice Faye, "You know that I really am/Much nicer than that sealyham"! As dog lovers know, this is another reason to watch the film, a real period piece, because sealyhams, which were fashionable in the Twenties and early Thirties, are now almost extinct!
    6ptb-8

    Lordy! Hi falutin vaudeville madness

    What a wacky funny glitzy mega musical from Fox in early 1934. The WB-Busby Berkeley films sure spawned major studio competition to out style each other with with glamor and dance, and this revue movie with a terrific cast is a genuine big musical event. Paramount already had the awesome MURDER AT THE VANITIES and Universal unleashed their hideous MOONLIGHT AND PRETZELS and MGM ran up DANCING LADY. So GEORGE WHITE'S SCANDALS is another Wonderbar/King Of Jazz nightclub theater revue of styled steppin' and pre code naughtiness. Gorgeous 18 year old Alice Faye in her big debut is a star on the spot, Spunky 16 year old Dixie Dunbar sings up a storm with Ukulele Ike and they add Jimmy Durante for raucous comedy blather. All very funny and often inventively spectacular ...and with a ghastly black-face number poking fun at Jolson's Going To Heaven On A Mule number from WONDERBAR. There is enough faux Berkeley spangle and angle and clever special effects to keep anyone like me who loves this deco pre code musical period happy. There is a bouncing ball song using showgirls instead of a ball, a terrific "You Nasty Man' song of rude lyrics, and even a tiny tot Mae West gig with a 5 year old Shirley Temple in the chorus. Mad fun and very lavish, this is a good scandal (even a dog act!) and easily explains why there was a 1935 and 1945 sequel.
    8museumofdave

    A New Star Is Born: Alice Sings "You Nasty Man!"

    There's nothing dull about this film; One could cite it as frequently tasteless, sometimes outrageous, often silly--but there's no moments when you want to flip through a magazine until the next musical number--this one crams all kinds of colorful costumes and genuinely wacky ideas into 80 fun-packed minutes--I can't think of another music so full of action and song--not all of them memorable, but each highly individual, and one so hideously tasteless it puts Jolson's "Goin To Heaven On a Mule" to shame.

    Unfortunately, Alice Faye's best number is also her only solo number, but it's the vibrant "Oh You Nasty Man." completely with plenty of lively lassies in lush flashy satins, and even features one miniaturized sweetie who perches on the edge of a cocktail glass, ready to dive in.

    For those of us used to Dick Powell as a 30's musical lead, Rudy Vallee is a bit of a stick, but he has several duets, and in a trio with Jimmy Durante and Cliff Edwards and three helpless babies, seems to be having a good time. And it's got a final line spoken by George White himself that's pure naughty pre-code.

    And that's the spirit of this offbeat, nutty musical--it isn't always good in the vein of the best musical of the period, Love Me Tonight, and it doesn't always leave you humming in the manner those Dubin-Warren Golddigger Movies, but it's a lovely, wacky, funny and even charming 80 minutes of gossamer Show Biz. That's worth 8 stars to me!
    5bkoganbing

    "Oh You Nasty Man"

    Unlike Florenz Ziegfeld who died before MGM could properly enshrine his memory on film with The Great Ziegfeld, Ziegfeld Girl, and The Ziegfeld Follies, his rival George White wasn't about to wait until he was beyond caring. White produced two versions of his famous scandals for Fox and the film is interesting because it's a chance to see a Broadway review, a type of show now relegated to piano bars.

    It might have really been something had White hired Busby Berkeley for the dance numbers. Then again he probably knew that those films like the ones Berkeley did at Warner Brothers would be remembered for him and not White even with his name in the title.

    White appears in this and looks every inch the dapper man about town and former hoofer himself. But George White's Scandals suffers from two drawbacks. The first is a rather silly backstage plot involving a romantic triangle of Scandals performers Rudy Vallee and Alice Faye and society débutante Adrienne Allen. The story in fact was written by White himself. It would have been a far better film had he done an introduction prologue like William Powell as Florenz Ziegfeld in Ziegfeld Follies with White playing himself.

    Rudy Vallee in fact did appear on stage in George White's Scandals of 1931 where he introduced Life Is Just A Bowl of Cherries and a song that did better as a revival in 1943 than when it first came out, As Time Goes By. Alice Faye at this time was a female vocalist hired by Vallee to appear with him and his Connecticut Yankees orchestra and was involved with him romantically. This was her film debut and she gets the best song in the score, Oh You Nasty Man.

    Jimmy Durante and Cliff Edwards also appear in George White's Scandals and Edwards has a good number with him comparing his trouble with women with that of Henry VIII. Unfortunately Durante's big number involves the second reason why George White's Scandals isn't shown that often. Durante has a number where he spoofs fellow entertainer Al Jolson. It's not just that Durante dons the black-face which he would have to do to imitate Jolson, but then White had the bad taste to back him with a big chorus of singers and dancers, boys and girls, all in black-face doing one of those Mammy numbers.

    Despite a frivolous plot and bad taste, George White's Scandals deserves to be remembered for the debut of Alice Faye, one of the best musical stars Hollywood ever produced.
    6marcslope

    Sort of "The Muppet Show" without the Muppets...

    ...because it's an onstage parade of musical numbers supported by a minimal plot of backstage intrigues. Supervised, directed, and starring the revue master George White (though other hands are rumored to havre helped with the direction), it's a rousing, vulgar string of so-so songs and scantily clad chorus girls, who are also called on to introduce the acts, and barely can negotiate their way through that. The top draw is a young Alice Faye, in her debut, basically playing as she did for her first few years there, a Fox version of Jean Harlow. She has only one song but it's a corker, "Oh, You Nasty Man," and she's immediately likable. She also pines for Rudy Vallee, in uninspiring form, while other backstage love stories involve Dixie Dunbar, Adrienne Ames, Jimmy Durante, and a game Cliff Edwards. Exuberant bad taste is all over the place-ethnic jokes, blackface, cheap-Scotsman jokes, breast-feeding jokes, pansy jokes-and this is the sort of 1934 release that may have hastened the instigation of the Production Code. It's not exactly good, but White is an amiable stand-in for Kermit the Frog, and some very long production numbers (when WILL that dog number stop repeating choruses) are at least eyefuls.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Eighteen-year-old Alice Faye, the female vocalist with Rudy Vallee and His Connecticut Yankees, was slated to make her screen debut in a featured spot. Then in a Hollywood fantasy come to life, Lilian Harvey, a musical favorite of European moviegoers, decided that the female lead was rather secondary and withdrew from the film. Enter Alice, at Rudy Vallee's suggestion, to fill Miss Harvey's shoes. Billed third after Mr. Vallee and Jimmy Durante, Miss Faye was bestowed with a saucy hit song, "Nasty Man" (music by Ray Henderson, lyrics by Irving Caesar and Jack Yellen), followed quickly by a movie contract with Fox.
    • Goofs
      All entries contain spoilers
    • Quotes

      Happy McGillicuddy: [KItty looks distressed] What's the matter, baby? What happened? Who hurt you?

      Kitty Donnelly: Oh, it's Jimmy.

      Happy McGillicuddy: What did he do, get fresh with you? Why I'll... .

      Kitty Donnelly: No, Happy!

      Happy McGillicuddy: I always wanted an excuse to kill a crooner.

      Kitty Donnelly: Happy, please.

      Happy McGillicuddy: Don't worry, honey. They don't do anything to you for killing crooners. Maybe fine you five bucks, that's all.

      Kitty Donnelly: But I don't want you to do anything to Jimmy.

      Happy McGillicuddy: No megaphone muffler's gonna do anything to you, not while the flower of knighthood blooms in this descendant of Richard the First, the Fifth, no, the Seventh. Skip it. I forgot the number.

      Kitty Donnelly: Happy, I'm leaving the show.

      Happy McGillicuddy: Yeah, in that case, George White is minus me. Because where you go, you go and where I go, I go. And that goes for the both of us.

    • Crazy credits
      Entire production conceived, created and directed by George White.
    • Connections
      Featured in Playboy: Inside the Playboy Mansion (2002)
    • Soundtracks
      Nasty Man
      Music by Ray Henderson

      Lyrics by Jack Yellen and Irving Caesar

      Performed by Alice Faye and chorus

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 28, 1934 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Hiljadu divnih snova
    • Filming locations
      • New York, USA
    • Production company
      • Fox Film Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 20 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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