Starving playwright Judith Wells meets playboy writer of musicals George Macrae over a plate of stolen spaghetti. He persuades producer Sam Gordon to buy her ridiculous play "North Winds" ju... Read allStarving playwright Judith Wells meets playboy writer of musicals George Macrae over a plate of stolen spaghetti. He persuades producer Sam Gordon to buy her ridiculous play "North Winds" just to improve his romantic chances, and even persuades her to sing in the sort of show she... Read allStarving playwright Judith Wells meets playboy writer of musicals George Macrae over a plate of stolen spaghetti. He persuades producer Sam Gordon to buy her ridiculous play "North Winds" just to improve his romantic chances, and even persuades her to sing in the sort of show she pretends to despise. But just when their romance is going well, Gordon's former flame Lul... Read all
- Awards
- 1 win total
- The Ritz Brothers
- (as Ritz Brothers)
- Lulu Riley
- (as Louise Hovick)
- David Rubinoff
- (as Rubinoff)
- Specialty Dancers in North Winds
- (as Tip Tap and Toe)
- Theatregoer
- (uncredited)
- Publicity Agent
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Alice could make a good living singing and dancing, but she's carrying a family burden. Her character name is Judith Poe Wells and her grandfather is none other than Edgar Allen Poe. She fancies herself a playwright. Therein lies a big problem for Ameche who's kind of gone goofy on the woman.
Of course Ameche's other problem is Louise Hovick, later known as Gypsy Rose Lee. She's his demanding fiancé who even though she likes to play around on the side holds a marriage certificate over his head even though Ameche may have been blotto when he did the deed in Connecticut.
All this is plot for a very charming backstage musical that also employs the talents of the Ritz Brothers and Alice's current husband Tony Martin. They sing a charming duet Called Afraid to Dream.
However the title song of You Can't Have Everything was the big hit from this show and because studio boss Darryl Zanuck frowned on his stars recording their material for vinyl, Alice never did a contemporary record. The song as the rest of the material in the film is done by Harry Revel and Mack Gordon.
Charles Winninger has a nice role as Ameche's producer. How they con poor Alice into doing what comes naturally is absolutely unmerciful.
You Can't Have Everything is a great Alice Faye vehicle. And wait till you see who Gypsy Rose Lee ends up with. And I'm not sure how that final line from her new betrothed got past the censors.
While it is said often that people don't see musicals for stories, or shouldn't expect too much from them, the story here is unlikely and over-stretched, sometimes going overboard with the silliness. Not everybody in the cast come off as well as they could. There is too much of the Ritz Brothers, and a few of their scenes do go on for too long and bog down the film. Their material is also a mixed bag, sometimes entertaining and sometimes too noisy and tiresome.
Tony Martin is too stiff and mannered in his role, never looking very comfortable, but he does undeniably sing gloriously (he always did in his films but rarely came off well as an actor). Charles Winninger is rather subdued in an under-utilised and blandly written role, though he does get one very funny line. Violinist/radio personality David Rubinoff plays beautifully but didn't really see the point to him being there personally.
However, Alice Faye is just delightful, having so much energy but also giving a lot of substance to her acting. Don Ameche is a very charming and witty partner, and Gypsy Rose Lee's hoot of a performance comes very close to stealing the show. Louis Prima is tremendously exuberant, and Tip, Tap and Toe have an electrifying tap dance routine that is choreographically 'You Can't Have Everything's' highlight. Phyllis Brooks and Wally Vernon give snappy support and Arthur Treacher is amusing.
'You Can't Have Everything' also looks very pleasing, very nicely shot and well designed. The songs are both sparkling and gorgeously romantic, especially the title song, "Please Pardon Us We're in Love", "Danger Love at Work" and "Afraid to Dream". Norman Taurog directs efficiently, with his one fault being that he could have done more to reign in the Ritz Brothers, and the script sparkles with wit and energy. Two of the best lines coming from Gypsy Rose Lee, but Ameche's quip likening exercise to going to the funerals of his athletic friends is a scream.
On the whole, so much to enjoy but patchy. 7/10 Bethany Cox
The money-making hit "You Can't Have Everything"," directed by Norman Taurog, featured the screen debut of burlesque entertainer Rose Louise Hovick, otherwise know as Gypsy Rose Lee. Singer Tony Martin also made an early personal film appearance, belting out a couple of songs, while the Ritz Brothers, Jimmy, Hal and Harry, in their fourth and largest role yet, play assistants to producer Sam Gordon (Charles Winninger), a partner with musical writer George Macrae (Ameche).
Faye plays poverty-stricken playwright Judith Poe Wells, a direct descendent to the 19th-century gothic writer Edgar Allan Poe. She's spotted by George, who hears her golden voice sing for a meal at an Italian restaurant. He tells producer Gordon he's found a great singer who can replace the disgruntled female lead in his musical. Complicating his romantic intentions for Judith is George's tough-nosed girlfriend, Lulu Riley (Hovick, aka Gypsy Rose Lee). To discourage his passion for Judith, Lulu claims George married her while he was in a drunken stupor. Rose's unsympathetic role was a bold move for the well-known performer whose schtick was to shed her clothes by teasing her audiences rather than the common bump and grind movements burlesquers at that time displayed. The child of a vaudeville entertainer, Rose performed in song-and-dance numbers with her younger sister June (Havoc), who later became a star in her own right. When June left for a man, Rose turned to burlesque, and was one of the most popular dancers in her profession. In the five films she appeared in during 1937 and 1938, she was credited as Louise Hovick, even though she had earlier changed her stage name to Gypsy Rose Lee. After two years in Hollywood, she worked sporadically in film, appearing in only seven more movies, the last 1969's "The Over-the-Hill Gang." Her 1957 autobiography, 'Gypsy: A Memoir' was made into the 1959 musical 'Gypsy,' which in turn was adapted to the 1962 film with Rosalind Russell as Rose.
The three Joachim brothers, born in Newark, New Jersey, were led by the oldest, Jimmy. He felt the three needed a more classy stage name early in their vaudeville careers, and spotted the name 'Ritz' on the side of a laundry truck. Jimmy, Harry and Al first entertained as a dance team, then branched into comedy. After six two-reel comedies in 1934, 20th Century-Fox hired them for spot duty in its musicals. Unlike their counterparts, the Marx Brothers, the Ritz looked and acted alike, even though boisterous brother Harry received the majority of their dialogue. The Ritz Brothers left Hollywood in 1943 for Las Vegas after being relegated to low budget movies. They remained a Vegas act until Jimmy suddenly died of a heart attack in December 1965.
Tony Martin's brief appearance with a pair of songs in "You Can't Have Everything" was typical at this stage of his young film career. As an avid saxophone player, the Oakland, California, high schooler played alongside future bandleader Woody Herman in a local orchestra before graduating college in the mid-1930s. Cutting records and doing short stints in film beginning with Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers' 1936 "Follow the Fleet," Martin fell for Alice Faye while filming "You Can't Have Everything," and married shortly after. The three-year marriage ended when both realized their busy acting schedules were disrupting their marital bliss. Martin's popularity rose through the years, and he became the highest paid Las Vegas performer during the mid-1950s, with sold out shows at the Desert Inn.
As a favorite of 20th Century Fox with production head Darryl Zanuck, Faye, 22, enjoyed ever-increasing popularity in her third year in movies after riding the coattails of radio singer Rudy Vallee from their Broadway days. After "You Can't Have Everything," Zanuck refined her on-screen looks to the more motherly type and gave her several prominent roles, including the following year's blockbuster hit, 1938's "In Old Chicago." She married bandleader Phil Harris in 1941 soon after her divorce from Martin. In one of the rare long-lasting Hollywood marriages, the two remained together for 54 years until his death in 1995.
Variety's film reviewer loved the melding of such a budding all-star cast, writing "You Can't Have Everything" was "a wild and hilarious film musical, one of the best of the series of this type which 20th Century-Fox has turned out."
Faye, sweet and vulnerable, plays an impoverished playwright named Judith Poe Wells, a descendant of Edgar Allan Poe, who writes plays livid with social significance and realism. She is convinced that it is her sacred duty to live up to the talent her family inherits. As the film opens, Judith accidentally meets a handsome Broadway insider named George Macrae (Ameche) in a Romano Italian restaurant when she fails to pay her plate of spaghetti. Macrae falls in love with Judith and persuades her to turn her into a showbiz sensation. But Judith is not interested in musical comedies or what she calls "usual George Macrae tripe". Rather, she wants serious dramas that depict life's struggles and harshness. Much to Judith's dismay, Macrae nevertheless tells his boss Sam Gordon (Winninger) about her play "North Winds" ("a play about the vital problems that confront womanhood in the frozen north") and ways of turning it into a musical comedy. Macrae's former girl Lulu (Gypsy Rose Lee) shows up and spoils the show by revealing something about Macrae's past and one night while he was drunk.
The Ritz Brothers, for once, are immensely enjoyable as their perform their remarkable comic acts and musical numbers. Their acts are perfectly integrated with the story. It was really a hoot to watch them. Also the film features a fantastic dance specialty by Tip, Tap, Toe, which anticipate those by Nicholas Brothers in the later Fox musicals.
Among the musical highlights, my absolute favorites are Faye's poignant rendition of the title tune (which kind of reminded me of her unforgettable "You'll Never Know" number in the classic 1943 musical "Hello, Frisco, Hello"), and the lively "Danger, Love at Work". But that's not all. Also look for "Afraid to Dream" and "Please Pardon Us We are in Love".
Don't miss "You Can't Have Everything" if you love all-time classic musicals.
Faye sings the title song and "Pardon Us, We're in Love" and she's wonderful - pretty, vivacious, and she sounds great. Ameche sings in a heady tenor, but the real male pipes in the film belong to Tony Martin, the star of the Broadway show, who sounds glorious. I admit to finding the Ritz Brothers annoying, especially because their numbers seem to go on and on. However, they do have funny moments here.
Enjoyable film and a good example of a prime Fox musical.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film debut of Gypsy Rose Lee (billed as Louise Hovick).
- GoofsOn the marriage license of George Macrae and Lulu Riley; her residence is shown as 1425 W. 52 Street. However, there isn't a 1400 block on W. 52 Street,the highest is 600.
- Quotes
Judith Wells: A little exercise won't hurt you.
George Macrae: I get all the exercise I need from going to the funerals of my athletic friends.
- Crazy creditsRubinoff and his Violin
- ConnectionsReferenced in Kramer contre Kramer (1979)
- SoundtracksYou Can't Have Everything
(1937) (uncredited)
Music by Harry Revel
Lyrics by Mack Gordon
Played during the opening and end credits
Sung by Alice Faye with David Rubinoff on violin
Reprised by The Ritz Brothers with Louis Prima and His Band
Played often in the score
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- You Can't Have Everything
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 40 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1