Sisters Casey and Babe work in a department store that puts on a show every year. As expected, things are going wrong with every act until Casey comes out to help Babe with her song. They ar... Read allSisters Casey and Babe work in a department store that puts on a show every year. As expected, things are going wrong with every act until Casey comes out to help Babe with her song. They are a hit, but in the final act, Casey again comes out and this time the president sees her ... Read allSisters Casey and Babe work in a department store that puts on a show every year. As expected, things are going wrong with every act until Casey comes out to help Babe with her song. They are a hit, but in the final act, Casey again comes out and this time the president sees her act and fires both her and Babe on the spot. Benny is able to book Casey, Babe, and Dean i... Read all
- Awards
- 2 wins total
- Mr. Mandelbaum
- (uncredited)
- Cop
- (uncredited)
- Store Stage Show Participant
- (uncredited)
- Chorus Girl
- (uncredited)
- Mr. Weill
- (uncredited)
- Italian Vegetable Cart Vendor
- (uncredited)
- Vaudeville Violinist
- (uncredited)
- Bit Role
- (uncredited)
- Bit Role
- (uncredited)
- Bit Role
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
This is one of the first MGM sound pictures, and it even has a couple of short scenes at the end that are in color. Those are of staged dance and costume extravaganzas. But, at best, they are B-level talent and entertainment. The film's opening scene is a real hoot and the only real comedy in it. What this movie is otherwise, is a scripted play that serves to knit together a few skits and song and dance routines of the Duncan Sisters, Rosetta and Vivian. They were a vaudeville team for some time, and Vivian wrote some of the songs for their act. They had played the title roles in a Broadway musical, "Topsy and Eva," that ran just over four months from late December 1924 to early May, 1925. Those were black face roles of the two characters from "Uncle Tom's Cabin," in a musical play written as a sequel to the Harriet Beecher Stowe story.
MGM was casting about looking for the talent that would soon make it the master and premier studio of cinema musicals. But this film clearly is third-tier for entertainment. The singing would hardly qualify for professional anywhere. The hoofing of the sisters amounts to nothing more than some synchronized steps and movements. And their comedy is lame. It may have been good enough for the smaller venues of the huge vaudeville circuit of the late 19th and very early 20th centuries. In that time, every town big enough to have a theater and people hungry for entertainment had vaudeville.
Some of the early 1929-1930 films with vaudeville-like revue formats had very talented entertainers, some of whom went on to have successful careers in cinema. But, others had people with lesser talents who wouldn't make the cut. This movie is in that group. Besides the lesser music and dance talent, the three leads are very hammy throughout. And the screenplay is sappy melodrama and overacting in the frequent epithets of disgust between Jimmy and Casey.
So, it It should come as no surprise that this was the only sound picture and last of three total feature films that the Duncan Sisters made. But for one more short they made together seven years later, they were finished in films. It is interesting, though, that most of the rest of the staff, including the bit players here, had long careers in film. Jed Prouty who plays David Parker would have 149 credits in films and then television into the 1950s. Benny Rubin who plays the Hogan Sisters' agent, Benny Friedman, acted in cinema and TV for more than six decades, and has 212 credits. Others have more.
One doubts that many people today would find this film entertaining. Most would probably give up on it by halfway through. I'm something of a cinephile who's interested in all aspects of the cinema and its origins and performers. Some others with similar interests, or students studying cinema may appreciate this film for those purposes. But I doubt that there will be many more to join the few who have commented positively on this film to this time. Most may even find my four stars a stretch. But the opening scene is worth one all by itself, and the color sequence toward the end with the choreography and unusual sliding scene earn it one more of the four stars I give it.
Here's an example in the dialog where the vaudevillian hamminess blots out the slight humor. Babe Hogan, "Jimmy, Jimmy, were...were you really thinking of me when you wrote that?" Jimmy Dean, "Sure I was. Every great composer has a girl who inspires his masterpieces."
Synopsis in brief: Set in New York City, the story opens with a chase after two girls are seen running from their apartment building, down the street, and immediately being pursued by a policeman and some passersby, causing some traffic accidents as the girls cross through heavy traffic, ending with them heading into a department store where it is soon revealed that they are late for work. The plot development introduces the Hogan sisters, Casey (Rosetta) as the wisecracking elder sister to Babe (Rosetta). Babe loves Jimmy Dean (Lawrence Gray), with whom she works in the sheet music department. For some reason, Rosetta dislikes Jimmy, which is never revealed why. She always finding fault in him and takes every opportunity to criticize him whenever possible in hope that Babe will become discouraged and forget about him. After getting fired from their jobs following the annual store show by Mr. Mandelbaum for his disapproval of Casey's clowning, the trio make a go for the big time in vaudeville. Although they become successful, things become complicated when Babe marries Jimmy, causing problems in her relationship with Casey, thus breaking up the act. While failures on their own, they all become too stubborn to make the first move and admit their faults, even when one of them becomes seriously ill with pneumonia.
The musical program: "Smile, Smile, Smile" (sung by employees); "What the Debutante Must Do" (fashion show sequence in two strip Technicolor), "I'm a Son of a ---." "Lady Love" (sung by Vivian Duncan); "I'm Following You" (sung by the Duncan Sisters); "Smile, Smile, Smile," "I'm Following You," "It Must Be an Old Spanish Custom," "Rigoletto," "It Must as Well Be You," "Let a Smile Be Your Umbrella" (sung by unseen vocalist during dramatic moment); "I'm Following You" (sung by Lawrence Gray); "Dance Number" (performed by Rosetta dressed up like a little Dutch Boy); "Hoosier Hop" (production number in two-strip Technicolor with the Duncan Sisters); and "I'm Following You." With the songs being the main attraction, only "I'm Following You" is quite memorable, even after several reprises.
Aside from the aforementioned leads, only Benny Rubin as Benny Friedman, the booking agent, and Jed Prouty (who played the stuttering uncle in "The Broadway Melody" ) as David Parker, the store manager who loves Casey, assume billing in the opening casting credits while others do not.
The title to IT'S A GREAT LIFE has been used several times over the years: Paramount (1935) with Joe Morrison; Columbia (1943), as part of the 28 film series featuring "Blondie and the Bumsteads" with Penny Singleton and Arthur Lake, as well as the long forgotten TV comedy series starring Michael O'Shea and Frances Bavier (1953-55).
The movie as a whole is really not bad. After it is all over, it'll be hard to get these lyrics, "Wherever you go, whatever you do, I want you to know, I'm following you" out of your head. IT'S A GREAT LIFE may never be categorized as a great early musical, but mostly a curiosity for fans of movies from this particular era as well as a rediscovery look into the careers of the once popular Duncan Sisters. Only the final minutes, highlighted by a Technicolor production number choreographed by Sammy Lee, comes off a bit weak.
Once shown on a frequent level on Turner Classic Movies cable channel prior to 1996, it's become more of a rarity today. (** Duncans)
MGM crafted this confection as a showcase for the talents of the Duncan Sisters, of Vaudeville & Broadway fame, and as such it's an interesting relic of its era. The sound quality is remarkably good, considering its age, one of the songs is quite good, and the antique color, which highlights a couple of stage sequences, is very pleasing to the eye. As a vehicle for screen stardom, however, the film proved a disappointment. The Sisters' movie career was over almost before if could get started.
Rosetta (1900-1959) and Vivian (1902-1986) do quite well as siblings who rise from performing in retail follies to the Vaudeville stage. Vivian, the pretty one, gets most of the film's few romantic moments, but Rosetta, who was an true clown able to do hilarious things with her face & body, steals the picture. When allowed to be silly she is enormous fun to watch. The script, unfortunately, keeps her character in a bad temper for much of the time, eventually wearying the viewer with her interminable fuming. She's so much more enjoyable when in a jolly mood, especially when teamed with sister Vivian. Their lovely duet, "I'm Following You," is a genuine heartwarmer.
Lawrence Gray, who had made a name for himself in comic Silent film roles, makes the most of his somewhat thankless part as the piano player who captures Vivian's heart. Jed Prouty, as the department store manager who quietly loves Rosetta, and Benny Rubin, playing a Vaudeville booking agent, both do well with their small roles.
The opening scene, with the Sisters madly dashing down the street to work, hotly pursued by a cop and a mob of excited New Yorkers, is one of the movie's best and gets the proceedings off to a frenzied start.
Sisters Casey (Rosetta Duncan) and Babe Hogan (Vivian Duncan) work at a major department store. Babe is sweet on the store's pianist for the sheet music department, James Dean (!!!) (played by Lawrence Gray). For reasons never quite clear, Casey hates him with a passion and constantly makes him the butt of her humor. Ill-humored Casey is a sarcastic cutup and ultimately her mockery of the store's "theme song" during a store musical production ends up getting all of the trio fired. Fortunately, a pal of Jimmy's, a talent agent, has seen the act and launches them on a successful career as vaudeville performers but the fighting between Casey and Jimmy only escalates and when Babe and Casey sneak off and get married, an infuriated Casey breaks up the act leading all of them down the path of failure.
Rosetta Duncan is a riot as the sassy older sister, she's a fantastic comedienne and her mocking, disrespectful humor seems astonishingly contemporary today even while the movie itself creaks like many early talkies. She also is a delight with a comic song. The talents of the (considerably) prettier Vivian Duncan are more modest although she is an endearing presence and sings lovely harmony with her sister. The sisters, both into their thirties at the time, are quite effective as their "little girl" personas in several song numbers as they no doubt were even more so on the stage at the time.
The movie seems a bit long with it's slender plot and small speaking cast and the turn toward melodrama was at least for modern audiences was a mistake, but the movie has still has much to recommend it with it's vivid glimpse at 1920's New York, a "flapper" fashion show, appealing two-strip Technicolor sequences, quite good songs and numbers and above all the two and only Duncan Sisters. As Babe Hogan would put it, this movie is quite "sweet".
Did you know
- TriviaTwo sequences, filmed in 2-strip Technicolor, totaling 1391 feet, occur in reels #2 (The Faulty Fashion Show) #10 (The Hoosier Hop and I'm Sailing on a Sunbeam).
- GoofsWhen the man upstairs says he'll call police, the audio doesn't match the movement of his mouth.
- ConnectionsEdited into Hello Pop (1933)
- SoundtracksI'm Following You
(uncredited)
Music by Dave Dreyer
Lyrics by Ballard MacDonald
Copyright 1929 by Irving Berlin Inc.
Performed by Rosetta Duncan and Vivian Duncan
Details
- Runtime1 hour 33 minutes
- Color