Stagestruck Jenny is elated when she is cast in her mother's most famous role. She is unaware of the new production being staged as a parody of the dated play and interprets the role serious... Read allStagestruck Jenny is elated when she is cast in her mother's most famous role. She is unaware of the new production being staged as a parody of the dated play and interprets the role seriously. And nobody finds the courage to tell her.Stagestruck Jenny is elated when she is cast in her mother's most famous role. She is unaware of the new production being staged as a parody of the dated play and interprets the role seriously. And nobody finds the courage to tell her.
Richard Abbott
- Mr. Blythe
- (uncredited)
Margaret Armstrong
- Margaret Armstrong
- (uncredited)
William Gould
- Laughing Audience Member
- (uncredited)
Wilfred Lucas
- Wilfred Lucas
- (uncredited)
Mary MacLaren
- Woman Jenny Talks to in Audience
- (uncredited)
Hank Mann
- Laughing Stage Hand
- (uncredited)
Max Wagner
- Max Wagner
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
CHATTERBOX is a combination of drama and comedy.. The film was less predictable than I thought.
Jenny (Anne Shirley), a young girl from Vermont, wants to be an actress. Her mother was an actress and her most famous role was in the 1890's stage play "Virtue's Reward". Jenny is a bit otherwordly, living in a world of her own, the bygone world of the 1890's. She meets a young artist/painter Phil (Phillips Holmes). She is secretly in love with him. He appears to be not interested in her. Reluctantly he takes her to a theatrical company in New York where she can get a part in her favorite play "Virtue's Reward": This melodramatic play has now become a comedy, but she doesn't know that and she takes the part very seriously. Phil worries about what will happen when she finds out the truth about the whole thing.
This is a wonderful film from start to satisfying finish. Perfect acting by the entire cast. Young Anne Shirley gives a terrific performance. She's very intense and she makes even the comedy parts dramatic and honest. Her trustfulness and enthusiasm are poignant. The very talented Phillips Holmes (now undeservedly degraded to B-films) is also surprisingly good and totally convincing. A remarkable film. I am hoping for a DVD release for a better print quality!
This is a wonderful film from start to satisfying finish. Perfect acting by the entire cast. Young Anne Shirley gives a terrific performance. She's very intense and she makes even the comedy parts dramatic and honest. Her trustfulness and enthusiasm are poignant. The very talented Phillips Holmes (now undeservedly degraded to B-films) is also surprisingly good and totally convincing. A remarkable film. I am hoping for a DVD release for a better print quality!
Once in a while a film shows up on TCM that is a small gem from the past. "Chatterbox" is just such a film. Set mostly in a small town, it stars Anne Shirley, little-known today, an actress who gave up a career in film while in her twenties. She lives in a mind-world of the late 1800's, a world of genteel manners, romantic writing, and little sense of irony. Her mother had been a noted actress and Shirley aspired to the same. The charm of the film lies in its detailed portrayal of small-town America. There is an honesty in the dialogue and behavior.
Without divulging too much plot, I must add that the revelation was Erik Rhodes, the pencil-mustachioed, gigolo of Astaire-Rogers movies, here, sans moustache,and Italian accent, a Broadway wise guy director.Throw in a very young and very blonde Lucille Ball and you have a diverting entertainment. The scene of Shirley's stage performance is wonderful.
Look for this film as a memento of an earlier, more innocent age.
Without divulging too much plot, I must add that the revelation was Erik Rhodes, the pencil-mustachioed, gigolo of Astaire-Rogers movies, here, sans moustache,and Italian accent, a Broadway wise guy director.Throw in a very young and very blonde Lucille Ball and you have a diverting entertainment. The scene of Shirley's stage performance is wonderful.
Look for this film as a memento of an earlier, more innocent age.
CHATTERBOX (RKO Radio, 1936), directed by George Nichols Jr., is a simple-minded little tale about a naive young teenager's inspiration in fulfilling her dream by becoming a stage actress against the wishes of her grandfather, only to learn the full meaning of life not really imitating art. The teenager in question is Anne Shirley, a young and prominent contract player for RKO Radio whose career specialized in playing such wholesome characters as presented in CHATTERBOX. As much as this sort of characterization might display her to contemporary viewers as a weak sister, she is, in fact, strong-willed without losing her feminine charm.
Inspired by Shirley's early characterization, which began with ANNE OF GREEN GABLES (RKO, 1934), where she was more of a chatterbox than she was in this production, Shirley does bring forth her titled-role in its early stages of the story as a lonely teenager whose only pleasure is constantly talking to anyone who would listen to her. Blending in the elements of ANNE OF GREEN GABLES (1934 - the talkative teenager) with Al Jolson in THE JAZZ SINGER (1927 - going against family authority by doing what she feels she's meant to do, and forbidden to return home) and Katharine Hepburn in MORNING GLORY (1933 - taking her profession so seriously that members of the troupe secretly regard her as goofy), the duration of the story concerns Jenny Yates (Anne Shirley), wanting to carry on the tradition of her deceased mother, an actress many years ago. She hopes to attend the upcoming presentation of the Village Players revival of "Virtue's Reward" (which her mother had appeared) being presented at the Hale Barn Theater. She is forbidden by Uriah, her grandfather (Edward Ellis) who warns her that once she steps out that door, like her mother, it will be locked to her forever. After she does leave home, Uriah has a change of heart and leaves the door unlocked, only to have it closed by their handyman, Michael Arbuckle (George Offerman Jr.) who does it in spite since Jenny knows enough about Michael, ranging from missing articles to the accidental burning of their barn, to get him fired. Jenny does return home only to find the door locked. With no other place to go, she hides inside the rumble seat of a car belonging to Philip Green (Phillips Holmes), a struggling young artist on his way to New York. After he arranges for Jenny in obtaining the lead role in "Virtue's Reward," reality sets in once she steps foot upon that wicked stage.
While Anne Shirley's presence makes the film, she's not in every scene. There are moments when time allows Uriah (Ellis) and Philip Green Sr. (Granville Bates) to brag about their ancestors, but on the whole, there are others in the cast worthy of honorable mention. Erik Rhodes, famous for his comedic Italian characters in two Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers musicals (THE GAY Divorcée and TOP HAT), plays it straight as Archie Fisher, director of the theatrical troupe. Then there's Margaret Hamilton, three years before immortalizing herself as the Wicked Witch in THE WIZARD OF OZ (1939), as "Tippy," a sympathetic landlady, once an actress herself, whose one-on-one talk with Jenny about the realities of theatrical life comes across realistically and sincere; and a very young and blonde Lucille Ball, as a temperamental stage actress who wants nothing more than to get her back salary.
CHATTERBOX, a feel good movie that says it all in its brief 68 minutes, is one of many Anne Shirley movies produced during that time to be overlooked and forgotten due to lack of television revivals. Formerly shown on American Movie Classics during its early years during the 1980s to 1993, it can be seen whenever possible on Turner Classic Movies (at one point in time was shown as part of a viewer's request night), and available on video cassette through a private collector. Film buffs, take note: the title, CHATTERBOX, was later used for a 1943 comedy for Republic Studios starring Judy Canova and Joe E. Brown, which can stir up come confusion whenever found in the TV listings. While the premise to CHATTERBOX is basically a story much to the liking of teenage girls, it does win the appeal of others as well. (**1/2)
Inspired by Shirley's early characterization, which began with ANNE OF GREEN GABLES (RKO, 1934), where she was more of a chatterbox than she was in this production, Shirley does bring forth her titled-role in its early stages of the story as a lonely teenager whose only pleasure is constantly talking to anyone who would listen to her. Blending in the elements of ANNE OF GREEN GABLES (1934 - the talkative teenager) with Al Jolson in THE JAZZ SINGER (1927 - going against family authority by doing what she feels she's meant to do, and forbidden to return home) and Katharine Hepburn in MORNING GLORY (1933 - taking her profession so seriously that members of the troupe secretly regard her as goofy), the duration of the story concerns Jenny Yates (Anne Shirley), wanting to carry on the tradition of her deceased mother, an actress many years ago. She hopes to attend the upcoming presentation of the Village Players revival of "Virtue's Reward" (which her mother had appeared) being presented at the Hale Barn Theater. She is forbidden by Uriah, her grandfather (Edward Ellis) who warns her that once she steps out that door, like her mother, it will be locked to her forever. After she does leave home, Uriah has a change of heart and leaves the door unlocked, only to have it closed by their handyman, Michael Arbuckle (George Offerman Jr.) who does it in spite since Jenny knows enough about Michael, ranging from missing articles to the accidental burning of their barn, to get him fired. Jenny does return home only to find the door locked. With no other place to go, she hides inside the rumble seat of a car belonging to Philip Green (Phillips Holmes), a struggling young artist on his way to New York. After he arranges for Jenny in obtaining the lead role in "Virtue's Reward," reality sets in once she steps foot upon that wicked stage.
While Anne Shirley's presence makes the film, she's not in every scene. There are moments when time allows Uriah (Ellis) and Philip Green Sr. (Granville Bates) to brag about their ancestors, but on the whole, there are others in the cast worthy of honorable mention. Erik Rhodes, famous for his comedic Italian characters in two Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers musicals (THE GAY Divorcée and TOP HAT), plays it straight as Archie Fisher, director of the theatrical troupe. Then there's Margaret Hamilton, three years before immortalizing herself as the Wicked Witch in THE WIZARD OF OZ (1939), as "Tippy," a sympathetic landlady, once an actress herself, whose one-on-one talk with Jenny about the realities of theatrical life comes across realistically and sincere; and a very young and blonde Lucille Ball, as a temperamental stage actress who wants nothing more than to get her back salary.
CHATTERBOX, a feel good movie that says it all in its brief 68 minutes, is one of many Anne Shirley movies produced during that time to be overlooked and forgotten due to lack of television revivals. Formerly shown on American Movie Classics during its early years during the 1980s to 1993, it can be seen whenever possible on Turner Classic Movies (at one point in time was shown as part of a viewer's request night), and available on video cassette through a private collector. Film buffs, take note: the title, CHATTERBOX, was later used for a 1943 comedy for Republic Studios starring Judy Canova and Joe E. Brown, which can stir up come confusion whenever found in the TV listings. While the premise to CHATTERBOX is basically a story much to the liking of teenage girls, it does win the appeal of others as well. (**1/2)
Jenny Yates lives with her grandfather because her mother died some time ago. However, she holds some resentment towards her grandfather because he essentially tossed the mother out of the house after she left to try to become an actress. Now, many years later, Jenny has a chance to leave home to act in the same play that her mother starred in...and although her grandfather is gruff and grumpy about this, he's not about to disown her like he did his daughter...by Jenny doesn't know this. So, she takes a giant leap and joins a traveling company of actors...and finds out it's not all it's cracked up to be.
Apart from seeing one of the theater company members in black-face, this is a very good film...enjoyable and with a few fun moments. This is a good showcase for Miss Shirley...one of her better films of the 1930s.
Apart from seeing one of the theater company members in black-face, this is a very good film...enjoyable and with a few fun moments. This is a good showcase for Miss Shirley...one of her better films of the 1930s.
Charming film about a country girl named Jenny (Anne Shirley) with big dreams and her head in the clouds. She dreams of following in her late mother's footsteps and becoming a stage actress. Through a series of events she finds her dream actually coming true. At least that's what she thinks, as she's really being used by an unscrupulous producer who knows she's terrible and has cast her in a comedy while poor Jenny thinks she's playing a straight drama.
Anne Shirley is the whole show here. She has some good support from the likes of Edward Ellis, Erik Rhodes, Phillips Holmes, and Margaret Hamilton (in one of her more approachable roles). Oh and Lucille Ball (with platinum blonde hair!) has a small but amusing part. But Anne Shirley is the star in every sense of the word. She's such a treat to watch. Her sensitive, lovable performance carries the movie. Her portrayal of Jenny Yates is one of the more endearing characterizations I've ever seen on film. It's impossible not to like this girl and still have a heart. It's a very pleasant, enjoyable film with some nice comedic touches and a little bit of romance too. Strays off course slightly at the climax but it ends well. Give it a shot and I'm sure you won't be disappointed.
Anne Shirley is the whole show here. She has some good support from the likes of Edward Ellis, Erik Rhodes, Phillips Holmes, and Margaret Hamilton (in one of her more approachable roles). Oh and Lucille Ball (with platinum blonde hair!) has a small but amusing part. But Anne Shirley is the star in every sense of the word. She's such a treat to watch. Her sensitive, lovable performance carries the movie. Her portrayal of Jenny Yates is one of the more endearing characterizations I've ever seen on film. It's impossible not to like this girl and still have a heart. It's a very pleasant, enjoyable film with some nice comedic touches and a little bit of romance too. Strays off course slightly at the climax but it ends well. Give it a shot and I'm sure you won't be disappointed.
Did you know
- TriviaNote a young (and blonde) Lucille Ball in just the second year of a seven-year contract at RKO. In less than twenty-one years from the release of this picture, she would own the studio.
- GoofsJenny comes back home from the play to find the door bolted. She previously left the house with her diary in her coat and returns with a program which she throws the way. Later, when Phil discovers her in the rumble seat of his car, the very large "Compendium" book is seen on the back seat, then she is clutching it while talking to his landlord. It is not shown how she got the huge book out of her house, and took nothing else.
- SoundtracksOh! Susanna
(1848)
Written by Stephen Foster
Played on a banjo in the New York show and sung by the maid
Details
- Runtime1 hour 8 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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