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IMDbPro

Fifi Peau de Pêche

Original title: Every Day's a Holiday
  • 1937
  • Approved
  • 1h 19m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
581
YOUR RATING
Mae West in Fifi Peau de Pêche (1937)
ComedyMusical

At the turn of the century, a con woman finds herself in trouble with the law while dealing with multiple suitors.At the turn of the century, a con woman finds herself in trouble with the law while dealing with multiple suitors.At the turn of the century, a con woman finds herself in trouble with the law while dealing with multiple suitors.

  • Director
    • A. Edward Sutherland
  • Writer
    • Mae West
  • Stars
    • Mae West
    • Edmund Lowe
    • Charles Butterworth
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    581
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • A. Edward Sutherland
    • Writer
      • Mae West
    • Stars
      • Mae West
      • Edmund Lowe
      • Charles Butterworth
    • 16User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos12

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    Top cast29

    Edit
    Mae West
    Mae West
    • Peaches O'Day
    Edmund Lowe
    Edmund Lowe
    • Police Captain Jim McCarey
    Charles Butterworth
    Charles Butterworth
    • Larmadou Graves
    Charles Winninger
    Charles Winninger
    • Van Reighle Van Pelter Van Doon
    Walter Catlett
    Walter Catlett
    • Nifty Bailey
    Lloyd Nolan
    Lloyd Nolan
    • John Quade
    Louis Armstrong
    Louis Armstrong
    • Jubilee Band Leader
    George Rector
    • George Rector
    Herman Bing
    Herman Bing
    • Fritz Krausmeyer
    Roger Imhof
    Roger Imhof
    • Trigger Mike
    Chester Conklin
    Chester Conklin
    • Cabby
    Lucien Prival
    Lucien Prival
    • Danny the Dip
    Adrian Morris
    • Henchman
    Francis McDonald
    Francis McDonald
    • Henchman
    John Indrisano
    John Indrisano
    • Henchman
    Irving Bacon
    Irving Bacon
    • Quartet Member
    Allen Rogers
    • Quartet Member
    John 'Skins' Miller
    • Quartet Member
    • (as John Skins Miller)
    • Director
      • A. Edward Sutherland
    • Writer
      • Mae West
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    6.1581
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    Featured reviews

    6lugonian

    Goodness Has Something To Do With It

    EVERY DAY'S A HOLIDAY (Paramount, 1937), directed by A. Edward Sutherland, stars Mae West (who also wrote the screenplay), making her eighth and final screen appearance for Paramount. In spite of its most lavish scale production, with costumes designed by Schiaparelli, a fine assortment of veteran character actors, including Charles Butterworth, Charles Winninger, Walter Catlett and Herman Bing (do take notice that Mae West is the only female listed in the cast), and a good but not entirely memorable score, EVERY DAY'S A HOLIDAY reportedly did poorly at the box office when released in theaters during the Christmas season of 1937. Whether or not goodness of the story had anything to do with it, EVERY DAY'S A HOLIDAY ranks as Mae West's "cleanest" movie to date. Returning to the her favorite turn-of-the-century setting, it does provide some added bonuses, the most noted being having West masquerading as the dark-haired French entertainer named Mademoiselle Fifi.

    The opening cast and credits features a festive background of fireworks before the story gets underway. The setting: New York City. The time: New Year's Eve, December 31, 1899. The central character: Peaches O'Day (Mae West), a confidence woman with a whole lot of confidence working on the wrong side of the law with 25 arrests to her record and no convictions. After the initial five minutes consisting of production number and the discussion involving Peaches between the corrupt Inspector "Honest John" Quade (Lloyd Nolan), ("he's so crooked he uses a cork-screw for a ruler"), and the honest law abiding Captain Jim McCarey (Edmund Lowe), Peaches makes her introduction riding on her horse and buggy cab across the Brooklyn Bridge presenting herself to the droll Larmadou Graves (Charles Butterworth), riding on his "horseless carriage," with her calling card: "Peaches O'Day, RSVP." Next scene finds her selling the Brooklyn Bridge to a Fritz Krausmeyer (Herman Bing) for $200, with bill of sale reading "One bridge in good condition." Aside from landing herself in trouble with the law ("I may crack a law, but I ain't never broke one") by cheating suckers, Peaches is admired by both Quade and McCarey. She prefers McCarey because he arrests her only to dismiss her case after he refunds the money to those she had cheated, particularly the latest buyer of the Brooklyn Bridge. Through Graves, Peaches later wins her friendship with his employer, Van Reighle Van Pelton Van Doon (Charles Winninger), an aristocrat who hasn't loved nor trusted a woman in 25 years, yet after seeing Peaches, becomes interested in her within 25 seconds. Later, Peaches is offered the leading role in an upcoming variety show, with Van Doon as her backer. Because she is ordered to leave town by Quade, "Nifty" Bailey (Walter Catlett), the show's producer, comes up with an idea by having Peaches leave New York and return later, reportedly from Boston, wearing a black wig disguised as a French entertainer, Mademoiselle Fifi. The amusement of the story picks up when Fifi becomes the toast of New York, with both John Quade (who fails to recognize her) and Jim McCarey (who sees through her disguise) not only trying to win her affections, but later to win an upcoming 1900 election as mayor of New York City.

    Edmund Lowe, a fine actor with a distinctive voice, performs his task well as Mae West's leading man, either in the romancing department as well as using his fists on abductors trying to prevent him from attending his election by midnight, and on the corrupt Quade himself. Lloyd Nolan, a resident actor of numerous Paramount programmers during the late 1930s where his divers ability ranged from playing good guys or gangsters, is perfectly cast in a rare comedic role as the corrupt police inspector.

    The musical numbers presented in the completed print includes: "Flutter By, Little Butterfly" (by Sam Coslow/performed by Irving Bacon, John "Skins" Miller, Allan Rogers and Otto Fries as the quartet, with chorus girls dressed as butterflies flying over the stage); "Mademoiselle Fifi" (by Sam Coslow/ sung by Mae West and all-male chorus); "Vote for McCarey," "Jubilee" (by Stanley Adams and Hoagy Carmichael/ sung by Louis Armstrong); and "Vote for McCarey" (reprise). Although the title song, "Every Day's a Holiday" is listed in the opening credits (by Sam Coslow and Barry Trivers), it is only heard as instrumental background music, with another "Along the Broadway Trail" which ended up on the cutting room floor. The legendary Louis Armstrong, seen briefly as a street cleaner, introduces the song "Jubilee" while parading down the street along with other street cleaners during the election rally. Mae West participates in this number with her sexy method of drum playing.

    EVERY DAY'S A HOLIDAY was distributed on video cassette in 1992-93 by MCA Home Video to commemorate the centennial birth of Mae West, with an added bonus of a theatrical trailer preceding the feature presentation. Out of circulation on the television markets since the 1970s, it did get cable TV exposure in the early 1990s on the Comedy Channel.

    While there's no such holiday as "Mae Day" honoring the legend of Mae West, EVERY DAY'S A HOLIDAY, which may not be high art, does include enough bright spots that make this one enjoyable. It may have marked the end of an era along with the closing chapter to West's association with Paramount, but not the end of the Mae West legacy. (**1/2)
    Kalaman

    Mae West's Last Paramount Pic is One of Her Funniest

    This lesser-known Paramount frolic, directed by Edward Sutherland, is one of Mae West's funniest and breeziest vehicles in her late period. It turned out to be her last Paramount picture, from her own solidly crafted screenplay. I had the opportunity of watching it recently along with another West movie called "Klondike Annie"(1936), directed by Raoul Walsh. Though Walsh is a vastly superior director than Sutherland, I much prefer this one to "Klondike Annie."

    Set in the 1890s New York, Mae delightfully plays Peaches O'Day, a notorious confidence woman who sells the Brooklyn Bridge and flees the city while the police are looking for her capture. She later returns disguising as a hilariously droll French singer, Madamoiselle Fifi. Then she promotes the city's election candidate Capt.McCarey (Edmund Lowe), who also plays the good cop tracking down the corrupt police chief (Lloyd Nolan). Mae is aided by uniformly fine supporting players: Charles Winninger, Herman Bing, Charles Butterworth, Chester Conklin, and Louis Armstrong as the musical street cleaner.

    Mae's suggestive one-liners are sparkling and fresh, especially the moment when she impersonates the French dame. Sutherland's unpretentious direction flows breezily through several hugely entertaining moments.

    Pleasant and thoroughly enjoyable, "Every Day's Holiday" is must viewing for Mae West fans or anyone looking for harmless, pleasurable escape.
    7boblipton

    Not Mae's Best, But...

    In turn-of-the-century New York, con woman Mae West runs Edmund Lowe for mayor against corrupt Lloyd Nolan.

    Mae West's last movie for Paramount has her ploughing her familiar milieu, with a large cast that includes farceurs such a Charles Butterworth, Charles WInninger, and Walter Catlett. Louis Armstrong get to perform half a number, and there is a general sense of frivolity. Its premiere at Manhattan's Paramount Theater broke house records. But this wasn't the old Mae West. A little something known as the Production Code had come in, and the front office at Paramount wasn't interested in fighting Joseph Breen for the sake of a lady they knew they'd have a fight with every time, and had pushed past 40. So the zingers are not as sharp, even if second-rate West, like second-rate Marx Brothers, is still better than anything else.
    10binapiraeus

    Relive the turn of the 20th century!

    Once again in her favorite era, the Gay Nineties (that is, the end of it: New Year's Eve, 1899), Mae West looks perfectly comfortable and swell - and in her element: as a small-time crook, 'selling' the Brooklyn Bridge to strangers... Police Chief 'Honest John Quade', who's also running for mayor, is obsessed by the idea of getting her arrested at last - because she had the 'impudence' to turn the crooked politician down. But the 'flatfoot' (as Mae alias 'Peaches O'Day' calls her 'special friends' from the New York police force) McCarey, who's assigned to the case, just 'isn't able' to get her - because he's in love with her and always lets her get away...

    But finally, he HAS to do his duty: he tells her unmistakeably that she's got to leave town. 'Peaches', though, has other plans which she works out at a crazy New Year's Eve party in the famous, renowned old 'Rector's Restaurant' with a new acquaintance of hers - a butler and his rich master, who 'hates women'... until he sees Peaches, of course! So, together with her 'manager', they decide that she'll actually leave for Boston - and return, with a black wig and a French accent, as a famous French singer for whom they'll put up a big show...

    Although, of course, by 1937 the Production Code showed no mercy anymore ESPECIALLY with Mae West's well-known 'dubious' scripts, and "Every Day's a Holiday" looks a lot tamer than her pre-Code movies, it's still a VERY enjoyable piece of entertainment, with an exceptionally good cast, a quite nice and clever story, nostalgic song numbers (Mae sings not only with a lovely French accent, but also in perfect French!), and generally a lively, inventive comedy you can just watch over and over again - Hollywood nostalgia at its very best!
    10rmunderhill

    The wonderful woman

    My husband purchased the DVD of this movie, as well as an original movie poster for my birthday. I am a huge Mae West fan, and have been all my life I suppose. She was a wonderfully talented woman, strong minded and strong willed, and not ashamed of who she was. It was a wonderful movie, and I suggest it to all who are able to get the opportunity to watch it. It has a wonderful cast, wonderful writing, direction is done well, and Ms. West is at her finest. She is absolutely stunning to say the least. This is one of those movies that will give you a belly laugh. Hope you all go down and try to find some of her wonderful work. She was a great writer, and actress, and did so much for women writers in her day and today.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      One of over 700 Paramount Productions, filmed between 1929 and 1949, that were sold to MCA/Universal in 1958 for television distribution and have been owned and controlled by Universal ever since. Its earliest documented telecast took place in Seattle WA Tuesday 18 November 1958; Mae West's pre-code reputation apparently influenced sponsors against it, even though it's strictly post-code, and airings were few and far between. One of its earliest documented telecasts took place in Pittsburgh PA Monday 18 April 1960 on KDKA (Channel 2). It was released on DVD 16 October 2012 as a single as part of the Universal Vault Series and again 8 March 2016 as one of nine titles in Universal's "Mae West: The Essential Collection".
    • Goofs
      When Peaches draws an outline around Graves on the store window, the line is separated at the top of his head. But in the shot from behind, with her wielding the glass cutter, the line is now connected and the outline is narrower.
    • Quotes

      Peaches O'Day: He's so crooked he uses a corkscrew for a ruler.

    • Connections
      Featured in L'univers du rire (1982)
    • Soundtracks
      Fifi
      Written by Sam Coslow

      Performed by Mae West (uncredited)

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Every Day's a Holiday?Powered by Alexa
    • Watch a short film about turn-of-the-century tunes on YouTube

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 27, 1938 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Fifi Peau-de-Pêche
    • Filming locations
      • General Service Studios - 1040 N. Las Palmas, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Paramount Pictures
      • Emanuel Cohen Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 19 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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