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IMDbPro

Hips, Hips, Hooray!

  • 1934
  • Passed
  • 1h 8m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
599
YOUR RATING
Ruth Etting, Dorothy Lee, Thelma Todd, Bert Wheeler, and Robert Woolsey in Hips, Hips, Hooray! (1934)
ComedyMusical

Two salesmen try to market a flavored lipstick.Two salesmen try to market a flavored lipstick.Two salesmen try to market a flavored lipstick.

  • Director
    • Mark Sandrich
  • Writers
    • Bert Kalmar
    • Harry Ruby
    • Edward Kaufman
  • Stars
    • Bert Wheeler
    • Robert Woolsey
    • Ruth Etting
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    599
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mark Sandrich
    • Writers
      • Bert Kalmar
      • Harry Ruby
      • Edward Kaufman
    • Stars
      • Bert Wheeler
      • Robert Woolsey
      • Ruth Etting
    • 19User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos15

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    Top cast34

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    Bert Wheeler
    Bert Wheeler
    • Andy Williams
    Robert Woolsey
    Robert Woolsey
    • Dr. Robert Dudley
    Ruth Etting
    Ruth Etting
    • Ruth Etting
    Thelma Todd
    Thelma Todd
    • Miss Frisby
    Dorothy Lee
    Dorothy Lee
    • Daisy Maxwell
    George Meeker
    George Meeker
    • Armand Beauchamp
    Phyllis Barry
    Phyllis Barry
    • Madame Irene
    James P. Burtis
    James P. Burtis
    • Sweeney
    • (as James Burtis)
    Matt Briggs
    Matt Briggs
    • Epstein
    Spencer Charters
    Spencer Charters
    • Clark
    Stanley Blystone
    Stanley Blystone
    • Race Driver
    • (uncredited)
    True Boardman
    True Boardman
    • Sports Announcer
    • (uncredited)
    Marjorie Brandon
    • Animal-Print Model
    • (uncredited)
    June Brewster
    June Brewster
    • Mr. Clark's Secretary
    • (uncredited)
    Thelma Bruskoff
    • Chorus Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Marion Byron
    Marion Byron
    • Page Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Jean Carmen
    • Blonde
    • (uncredited)
    Nat Carr
    Nat Carr
    • Gas Station Proprietor
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Mark Sandrich
    • Writers
      • Bert Kalmar
      • Harry Ruby
      • Edward Kaufman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    6.4599
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    Featured reviews

    7lugonian

    Lipstick and Slapstick

    HIPS, HIPS, HOORAY! (RKO Radio, 1934), directed by Mark Sandrich, stars the comedy team of Bert Wheeler (the innocent boyish type banana eater) and Robert Woolsey (the one with the horn-rim glasses, cigar and all the wisecracking quips) in another one of their wildest romps. Often classified as their very best comedy, it's certainly their most fast-paced 68 minutes. Aside from puns, wisecracks and cartoonish style antics, there's also Dorothy Lee, the team's frequent co-star, making her return engagement as Wheeler's love interest for the first time since GIRL CRAZY (1932), to make their reunion complete. There's also a musical highlight performed by the third billed "mistress of melody," Ruth Etting, appearing only for a few minutes singing a bright tune set during a radio program.

    The plot opens at the struggling enterprise of Maiden America Beauty Products Inc. where Daisy Maxwell (Dorothy Lee), one of its models and sales clerks, is trying to attract customers by demonstrating at the store window. She finds the attention is not on her but on a couple of peddlers across the street, Andy Williams (Bert Wheeler) and "Doc" Dudley (Robert Woolsey), demonstrating flavored lipsticks. Mistaking Daisy's wave as her way of being acquainted, Andy walks over to her and is told she's losing customers because of what they're doing. To help this "swell kid," Andy offers to help sell her products along with theirs, but with a couple of police officers nearby and to keep from getting arrested for soliciting without a license, Andy and Bob give away $24.50 worth of her items instead. Because the company is on the verge of bankruptcy due to Arnold Beauchamp (George Meeker), its crooked manager, siding with Madame Irene (Phyllis Barry), its competitor, Miss Frisby, Daisy's employer, stumbles upon the idea that because of Andy and Doc's "expert salesmanship," that they should merge with the boys, in spite the fact they Andy and Doc aren't what they appear to be. In order to make a good impression with the girls, Doc arranges for Mr. Clark (Spencer Charters), president of the Clark Investment Company, to leave his office at the Banker's Trust Building just long enough for the duel to use his office to discuss business matters with Daisy and Miss Frisby. When caught in the act of song and dance, they all make a hasty retreat, with Doc unwittingly taking Clark's bag of bank securities instead of his own bag of lipstick products. Before the promotional cross country auto race between competitors Maiden America and Madame Irene, situations occur as Andy and Doc find themselves being pursued by a couple of detectives, Epstein (James Burtis) and Sweeney (Matt Briggs), hired by Mr. Clark to locate his missing bank funds. As Andy and Doc discover their error and attempt to return the money, they find the bag has mysteriously disappeared, forcing the boys by doing the same thing.

    In typical fashion in most Wheeler and Woolsey comedies, there's musical moments on two songs, mostly reprized throughout the story, with music and lyrics by Bert Kalmar and Harry Ruby. The motion picture soundtrack includes: "Keep Romance Alive" (sung by Ruth Etting); "Just Keep on Doing What You're Doing" (sung/performed by Wheeler, Woolsey, Dorothy Lee and Thelma Todd); "Just Keep on Doing What You're Doing" (reprise); "Keep Romance Alive" (chorus girls/production number); "Keep Romance Alive" (tap dance by Bert Wheeler/comic dance by Robert Woolsey); and "Just Keep on Doing What You're Doing" (closing). While the comedy antics of Wheeler and Woolsey are a mix of hit and miss, best moments occur in the pool room where the balls have minds of their own, along with silly but often amusing race car chase.

    While the Wheeler and Woolsey comedies have lacked any sort of attention and cult following in later years of other comedy teams as Laurel and Hardy or Abbott and Costello due to lack of television broadcasts, HIPS! HIPS! HOORAY, and several of their other works, have achieved some rediscovery over the years when distributed to home video and cable television broadcasts on American Movie Classics (prior to 2001) and Turner Classic Movies. This particular one, however, with certain blackouts and brief scenes indicating edited material to tighten structure in plot, retains enough routine entertainment to have viewers "keep on doing what you're doing," by sitting back and enjoying this one. (***)
    10Ron Oliver

    Mr. Wheeler & Mr. Woolsey Invite You To Join Them In A Little Light Entertainment

    Two zany scam artists find it's all HIPS, HIPS, HOORAY! when they meet the curvaceous owner of Maiden America Beauty Products and her lovely female employees.

    Wheeler & Woolsey (Bert Wheeler is the short guy with curly hair; Robert Woolsey is the bespectacled fellow with the cigar) star in this often hilarious film. The Boys were a perfect comedy duo and their movies are always great fun to watch (here they try to promote flavored lipsticks and get involved in a cross-country auto race, while keeping one jump ahead of the law ). It is indeed a pity that these very talented comics are all but forgotten now.

    Cute little Dorothy Lee returns as Wheeler's perennial love interest. The beautiful & tragic Thelma Todd, a very gifted comedienne in her own right, puts the spark in Woolsey's eye.

    Movie mavens will spot an unbilled Bobby Watson, who gets one funny line as a Dance Director.

    Director Mark Sandrich keeps the plot moving at a frantic pace throughout. Some of the sights & situations push the borders of good taste in this pre-Production Code movie.

    The Boys, Miss Lee & Hot Toddy do a wild burlesque of Diaghilev during their performance of `Just Keep On Doing What You're Doing'. Singer Ruth Etting drops by long enough to trill `Keep Romance Alive' at a radio broadcast featuring ungarmented bathing models.

    And, yes, those really are frogs climbing out of the race car's radiator...
    didi-5

    gloriously wacky stuff

    Another little gem from the mad 30s boys of RKO as this frenetically paced oddity takes us from flavoured lipsticks to a mad Keystone-like car race in the space of just over an hour. Alongside cigar-chomping Woolsey and irritating little Wheeler we have Dorothy Lee (as per usual) and Thelma Todd playing the cutie romantic interest parts, and a short song right at the beginning from third-billed Ruth Etting (in a rather fetching hat).

    Best sequences in this one - "Just Keep On Doin' What You're Doin'", really funny - the whole car race sequence, and the bevy of cuties with flavoured lipsticks ("we've got to guess what flavour" - oh, sure ...). I bet the set cleaners at RKO were knee-deep in bananas by the end of the shoot though :)
    7ptb-8

    Pucker up and sing!

    As an art deco dream, this risqué pre code silliness is an RKO deluxe farce with their in house duo W&W. It all depends on your taste for their shyster/naive antics and you might find their style grating if unaware what to expect. If you know W&W then settle in for the usual gay romp except this time the RKO art direction and set design is a major star as well...esp in the first half. As a story line, well there almost isn't one apart from them trying to get laid and sell flavored lipsticks in a skyscraper. The second half is a ridiculous car chase with cartoon style stunts and yelling. The film opens with a delicious beauty plea by Ruth Etting as the RKO showgirls lounge nude in bubble baths with strategically placed perfume bottles. One later scene is a demolition derby to music of someone's gorgeous deco office... and yet another taste test lip locking surprise features some really rude gags. The costumes on the showgirls out rival the S&M look of LULLABY OF Broadway a year later. Made a year before the censorship code of 1934, HIPS HIPS HOORAY is about as rude and funny as it could be for the time... but today the real star of the film is the RKO set and design department.
    6bkoganbing

    Lipstick told the tale on you

    This Wheeler&Woolsey film finds the guys selling flavored lipsticks on the street corner to make a buck. People did that sort of stuff in the Depression. They get noticed, first by cops but then by Thelma Todd and one of her salesgirls Dorothy Lee. As usual Lee pairs with Bert while Thelma Todd does some of her best vamping with Bob.

    George Meeker works for Todd, but is secretly working for a rival to sabotage her store. When the boys lift some valuable securities accidentally he finds them and sics the cops on them.

    The finale is a kind of Grand Prix marathon and Bert and Bob are quite inventive in their methods of overcoming obstacles.

    Ruth Etting makes a guest appearance with one song in the beginning, always a treat.

    The race and a sequence where they play a on by stealing an office on the fly is similar to what was done in The Sting. Maybe George Roy Hill got the idea from seeing this.

    Good fun from W&W.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      During the song "Keep On Doing What You're Doing", Dorothy Lee is dropped on her back. Although she carries on, and finishes the number, the injury to her spine left her in pain for the rest of her life.
    • Goofs
      During the "Keep On Doing What You're Doing" number Thelma Todd loses the bottom two buttons from her dress. One can be seen flying off before she goes out to the balcony. The other is lost outside. She starts the dance with one button centered at the top and six down the side. As the dance ends, there are only four left on the side.
    • Quotes

      Miss Frisby: Two minds and a single thought.

      Dr. Dudley: Yes, it's about all they can handle at one time.

    • Connections
      Featured in Thou Shalt Not: Sex, Sin and Censorship in Pre-Code Hollywood (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Keep Romance Alive
      (1933) (uncredited)

      Written by Harry Ruby and Bert Kalmar

      Sung by Ruth Etting

      Danced by chorus girls twice

      Danced by Bert Wheeler and Robert Woolsey

      Played often in the score

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    FAQ15

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 2, 1934 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Hipp hipp hurra!
    • Filming locations
      • RKO Studios - 780 N. Gower Street, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $336,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 8 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Ruth Etting, Dorothy Lee, Thelma Todd, Bert Wheeler, and Robert Woolsey in Hips, Hips, Hooray! (1934)
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