IMDb RATING
5.7/10
162
YOUR RATING
Nightclub singer Joan Warren's agent Nicky puts her into situations designed to advance her career.Nightclub singer Joan Warren's agent Nicky puts her into situations designed to advance her career.Nightclub singer Joan Warren's agent Nicky puts her into situations designed to advance her career.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 4 wins & 1 nomination total
Jimmy Ritz
- Jimmy Ritz
- (as The Ritz Brothers)
Harry Ritz
- Harry Ritz
- (as The Ritz Brothers)
Monica Bannister
- Member of Girls Band
- (uncredited)
Bonnie Bannon
- Member of Girls Band
- (uncredited)
Lynn Bari
- Hotel Telephone Operator
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
"Sing, Baby, Sing" is a passable, sometimes alluring lightweight Fox musical starring Alice Faye, Gregory Ratoff, Patsy Kelly, Adolph Menjou, and introducing The Ritz Brothers. Faye is an aspiring singer/actress who becomes involved with a drunken Shakespearean actor Bruce Farraday(Menjou). Farraday becomes infatuated with Joan after seeing her one night in a nightclub. Joan's agent(Ratoff) sees this occasion as a way of advancing her showbiz career. Patsy Kelly provides good supporting role as Fiz, Joan's friend. The Ritz Brothers perform their often hilarious, often annoying shenanigans, interrupting the story for their routine comic acts. As the other user-comment has said, "Sing,Baby,Sing" is mainly for fans of Alice Faye. It is a good early role for Faye to shine and sparkle, but it is way below her best, most spirited musicals at Fox.
Sing Baby Sing stars Alice Faye as a good singer and dancer who can't seem to
get a break on the nightclub circuit. Plucky Alice is down, but not out and she's
got a madcap agent in Gregory Ratoff looking for every kind of a conceivable
break for her.
An encounter with aging ham matinee idol Adolphe Menjou gives Ratoff the idea that she should get some notoriety with an association with Menjou. It works all too well as Alice's known as a golddigger from coast to coast. Ratoff then has to fix what he's started and even gossip reporter Michael Whalen also is anxious to write a retraction because he kind of likes Alice.
There's far more to Sing Baby Sing than those I've mentioned. Look at the cast and you'll see Patsy Kelly, Ted Healy, Montagu Love, the Ritz Brothers and Tony Martin there. Enough to make you want to see this film.
Montagu Love is Menjou's business manager and watchdog. Not that he doesn't need one, but in this case Love is interfering with Faye's career as well. Healy sets him up beautifully at the Kansas City railroad station with a fake wife and kids in front of reporters. Aided and abetted by Patsy Kelly.
The Ritz Brothers made their feature film debut in Sing Baby Sing and they contribute their usual monkeyshines. Sing Baby Sing got one Oscar nomination for Best Song and it's for When Did You Leave Heaven which got Tony Martin his first Hollywood notices. He wound up marrying the leading lady as we know.
Menjou's burlesquing of John Barrymore was one of many outrageous ham handed parts that Menjou made a specialty of. As for Barrymore if his attitude was anything like it was in regard to The Royal Family Of Broadway and the role of Tony Cavendish there, he probably enjoyed this film more than anyone else.
80+ years later you'll enjoy it too.
An encounter with aging ham matinee idol Adolphe Menjou gives Ratoff the idea that she should get some notoriety with an association with Menjou. It works all too well as Alice's known as a golddigger from coast to coast. Ratoff then has to fix what he's started and even gossip reporter Michael Whalen also is anxious to write a retraction because he kind of likes Alice.
There's far more to Sing Baby Sing than those I've mentioned. Look at the cast and you'll see Patsy Kelly, Ted Healy, Montagu Love, the Ritz Brothers and Tony Martin there. Enough to make you want to see this film.
Montagu Love is Menjou's business manager and watchdog. Not that he doesn't need one, but in this case Love is interfering with Faye's career as well. Healy sets him up beautifully at the Kansas City railroad station with a fake wife and kids in front of reporters. Aided and abetted by Patsy Kelly.
The Ritz Brothers made their feature film debut in Sing Baby Sing and they contribute their usual monkeyshines. Sing Baby Sing got one Oscar nomination for Best Song and it's for When Did You Leave Heaven which got Tony Martin his first Hollywood notices. He wound up marrying the leading lady as we know.
Menjou's burlesquing of John Barrymore was one of many outrageous ham handed parts that Menjou made a specialty of. As for Barrymore if his attitude was anything like it was in regard to The Royal Family Of Broadway and the role of Tony Cavendish there, he probably enjoyed this film more than anyone else.
80+ years later you'll enjoy it too.
This movie is for fans of Alice Faye and Patsy Kelly, and probably film collectors. The movie isn't the greatest, but every studio now and then makes films so actors and actresses have something to do. This movie is what you call a "B" movie. The singing of Alice Faye keeps you watching, the music and dancing is a most, especially if you wanna see how nightclubs, songs, dancing, and life was like in the mid-1930s. Patsy Kelly a great, forgotten comic, keeps you smiling and laughing with her quick one-liners and wisecracks. Patsy Kelly was a skilled, natural comic, she could give Lucille Ball, Martha Raye, Jean Arthur, June Allyson, Ann Sothern, and Carole Lombard a run for their money. All of them were great, but Patsy Kelly had a style of their own. She could also sing and dance. Their were many great female comics, more then men in the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s. Patsy Kelly is a treat.
But, some of the forgotten men were The Ritz Brothers are a funny, dancing team, their what you call musical comedy. When Daryll Zanuck saw them in a nightclub he signed them quickly. Basically the movie is about Joan Warren-Alice Faye, who wants to make it, but she doesn't want to be something she's not to make it, but her agent will do anything, anything for her to make it, and while he's doing it they run into all kinds of "drama" but through it all the songs, music, dancing prevail. Great movie if you can catch it on tv.
But, some of the forgotten men were The Ritz Brothers are a funny, dancing team, their what you call musical comedy. When Daryll Zanuck saw them in a nightclub he signed them quickly. Basically the movie is about Joan Warren-Alice Faye, who wants to make it, but she doesn't want to be something she's not to make it, but her agent will do anything, anything for her to make it, and while he's doing it they run into all kinds of "drama" but through it all the songs, music, dancing prevail. Great movie if you can catch it on tv.
The rest of the movie is pleasant/mediocre, but Adolphe Menjou's parody of John Barrymore is fantastic. As daring as it is accurate, it makes one feel almost guilty at enjoying it so much (the movie was kicking a man when he was down in lampooning Barrymore's drunken antics and publicly disintegrating marriage). Menjou doesn't just copy Barrymore's mannerisms but has conveyed his essential noble but impish spirit, and the fun he is having is contagious--the scene in the hotel room ends on a moment of inspired hilarity, as truthful as it is loony.
This inspired impersonation had an ironic sequel: Four years later, Menjou played the Barrymore role in a remake (why?) of A Bill of Divorcement. That time he was not able to channel, in a serious way, the personality he had assumed so well in this film; it was a terrible performance.
This inspired impersonation had an ironic sequel: Four years later, Menjou played the Barrymore role in a remake (why?) of A Bill of Divorcement. That time he was not able to channel, in a serious way, the personality he had assumed so well in this film; it was a terrible performance.
A lively musical comedy in which Adolphe Menjou draws upon troubled actor John Barrymore as his inspiration for Bruce Faraday, a Hollywood superstar with a liking for bay rum. Menjou has a lot of fun, and young Alice Faye is vivacious as the budding songstress whom the press mistakenly assume is Faraday's lover. The Ritz Brothers make their screen debut here, but Gregory Ratoff gets more laughs as Faye's bankrupt agent.
Did you know
- TriviaFeature film debut of The Ritz Brothers.
- Quotes
Bruce Farraday: Radio! I hate it! Music from cans like soup!
Details
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Chante, bébé, chante! (1936) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer