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IMDbPro

Grande chérie

Original title: Sweetie
  • 1929
  • Passed
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
109
YOUR RATING
Nancy Carroll and Jack Oakie in Grande chérie (1929)
MusicRomanceSport

A chorus girl inherits a men's college where her boyfriend is a star football player.A chorus girl inherits a men's college where her boyfriend is a star football player.A chorus girl inherits a men's college where her boyfriend is a star football player.

  • Director
    • Frank Tuttle
  • Writers
    • Lloyd Corrigan
    • George Marion Jr.
  • Stars
    • Nancy Carroll
    • Helen Kane
    • Stanley Smith
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    109
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Frank Tuttle
    • Writers
      • Lloyd Corrigan
      • George Marion Jr.
    • Stars
      • Nancy Carroll
      • Helen Kane
      • Stanley Smith
    • 10User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos15

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    Top cast19

    Edit
    Nancy Carroll
    Nancy Carroll
    • Barbara Pell
    Helen Kane
    Helen Kane
    • Helen Fry
    Stanley Smith
    Stanley Smith
    • Biff Bentley
    Jack Oakie
    Jack Oakie
    • Tap-Tap Thompson
    William Austin
    William Austin
    • Professor Willow
    Stuart Erwin
    Stuart Erwin
    • Axel Bronstrup
    Joseph Depew
    Joseph Depew
    • Freddie Fry
    Wallace MacDonald
    Wallace MacDonald
    • The Coach
    Dorothy Mathews
    Dorothy Mathews
    • Co-Ed
    Leroy Boles
    Leroy Boles
    • Student
    • (uncredited)
    Eugene Fischer
    • Student
    • (uncredited)
    Edward Gazelle
    • Student
    • (uncredited)
    Dannie Mac Grant
    Dannie Mac Grant
    • Student
    • (uncredited)
    The King's Men
    • Title Song Quartet
    • (uncredited)
    Fred Kohler Jr.
    Fred Kohler Jr.
    • Student Football Player
    • (uncredited)
    Aileen Manning
    • Miss Twill
    • (uncredited)
    Frank Ross
    Frank Ross
    • Student
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Sellon
    Charles Sellon
    • Dr. Oglethorpe
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Frank Tuttle
    • Writers
      • Lloyd Corrigan
      • George Marion Jr.
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    6.2109
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    Featured reviews

    HarlowMGM

    "A Preposition is when you ask, and your girl says No"

    SWEETIE is a better than average musical from 1929, the first year talking pictures were the norm but many were quite stiff. This one is well photographed, moves well, and most thankful for a 1929 Paramount, the cast is including the men are not decked out in heavy makeup.

    Rising Broadway starlet Nancy Carroll and college football quarterback Stanley Smith decide to leave their current activities behind and elope. Coach Wallace MacDonald talks Stanley out of it since he's important to Pell College potentially getting their first winning season ever and the college's survival may depend on it. Alas Nancy has already quit her show and she is furious when Stanley asks her to wait until the season's over, just eight months. They break up and she goes back to Broadway - and has to start over as a chorus girl. Revenge shows up out of nowhere (in one of the weirdest ever "meeting again" scenarios in films) when Nancy's distant cousin dies, and it turns out she will inherit the very college Stanley attends! The all-boys school welcome the young beauty with open arms including a surprised Stanley but she has revenge up her sleeve even if it closes the college!

    Nancy Carroll is the nominal star but I'd venture both Stanley Smith and Helen Kane have more footage; there's quite a piece before Carroll enters the picture and even then she is off the screen for periods. Carroll was fast becoming a popular star on the early talkie screen but here her character is considerably more devious and selfish than in other films. Another comet of the era is Helen Kane, now a legendary vocalist but her peak was also brief. Helen Kane was one of a kind, a slightly plump comic vocalist specializing in sexy songs and as man hungry in her films as Mae West would later be. She may be an acquired taste but plenty of fans myself included most definitely acquired it. She's delightful and keeps this film moving with her cute songs, including the now classic "He's So Unusual" which was given renewed fame in the 1980's by Cyndi Lauper. Jack Oakie, early in his career and much thinner than in his salad days, is good as Nancy's pal and Helen's song partner. He pens a new college song for Pellham, a sassy "Alma Mammy", a parody of a Al Jolson number which is given three performances in the film, one by Oakie, a quite elaborate one by the school chorus including the girls from the neighboring college, and finally and unfortunately one at the big football game in which the chorus wears comic black masks.

    Three supporting players of note standout here. William Austin is a kindly, effete staff member named "Professor Willow" (the credits suggest his nickname is a word often used before willow, and which probably would be censored here but I didn't hear anyone use it; it was either cut or the work of some bad boy in Paramount's credits title division). Austin had a long career playing "sissy" types in films but rarely gets mention in film history books like Franklyn Pangborn. Wallace MacDonald was playing bits from the early 1910's, often in Charlie Chaplin pictures. He was quite a handsome hunk of a man and looks remarkably young at 38 for this era when most men of his age back then seemed quite middle aged, he later had a brief career in B westerns beore moving on to a long career as a film producer for Columbia. Another handsome supporting player was Joe Depew as one of the youngest on the football team (just 17 in 1929) , his acting career never got off the ground but he worked behind the scenes and worked steady as a associate director for Paul Henning on his television shows in the 1950's leading to his being the director of over 140 (over half of the series) for the legendary sitcom "The Beverly Hillbillies".

    Neither Stanley Smith nor Stu Erwin, as a dumb student, seem that credible as football heroes (Smith is both the star quarterback and the composer of the school's musicals!) but this movie is quite fun and has a talented cast that makes it work, perhaps so much so that there were dozens of similar musicals in the next few years.
    Sterling-3

    Great fun with Helen Kane!

    Helen Kane steals the whole show at Pelham College. She does the "Prep-Step" with Jack Oakie and watches the boys from a tree . .. until she gets caught.

    Lots of good songs. Nancy Caroll sings "My Sweeter Than Sweet" and Helen sings "He's So Unusual" later made famous again by Cyndi Lauper.

    They used to show TV prints of this one but now . . .who knows where it is. Paramount films are disintegrating fast.
    7Maliejandra

    Cute College Musical

    Stanley Smith is an obscure actor today, but in 1933 he was to take Dick Powell's role in Footlight Parade when Dick got sick with pneumonia. When Dick got well, Stan was out, and he never amounted to much. Judging by his performance in this film, I can see why. He reminds me of Lawrence Gray, who was adequate but lacked that something special that made audiences want to see him again.

    The film also stars Nancy Carroll who was quite beautiful, Helen Kane who won me over with her cute voice and silly antics (she is introduced sitting in a tree shooting the man she loves), and Jack Oakie who is quite attractive here in this early part, and brimming over with the personality that made him famous. The scenes are incredibly beautiful, mostly set on a college campus, and the music is fun but none of it is very memorable, except for "Alma Mammy" which turns the alma mater into a jazzy Jolson-style number.

    This college romp was screened at Cinevent in 2012.
    drednm

    Alma Mammy

    Cute early musical starring Nancy Carroll as a chorus girl who inherits a men's college where her ex-boyfriend (Stanley Smith) is a star football player. She tries to sabotage his career until she gets school spirit. An original musical for the screen, SWEETIE boasts a good cast and some solid tunes.

    Helen Kane co-stars as the troublemaking Helen who boop-a-doops through "He's So Unusual" and does a mean "Pep Step" with Jack Oakie, a brash hoofer who follows Carroll to college and enrolls. William Austin is the silly college dean, and Stu Erwin is a dumb-blond football player who is usually the target of Kane's pop gun.

    Carroll and Smith sing a few songs, but it's Oakie's "Alma Mammy" that flows through the film as a theme song after Oakie is told that alma mater is Latin for dear mother, which he converts into a Jolson-like MAMMY song.

    Nancy Carroll was Paramount's top musical star in early talkies, and she's stunning, but this film belongs to Helen Kane and Jack Oakie.
    5CinedeEden

    Mammy!

    Betty Boop... whoops i mean helen kane makes a wonder perfomace in this early talkie as well as Nancy Carroll who does well in this musical drama but wished she did more singing in this picture. Some scenes were corny and rushed but then again this was the early days of sound. It is a wonder how early colleges looked liked in the 1920s and wonder how it would be during the great depression. Football is depicted as it was in the motion picture "so this is college" also a film that came out in 1929. Most of these college productions of the early days of hollywood dont show a classroom or the students even attending any classess.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Sheet music from this movie can be seen propped up on a piano in the 1947 Columbia short OUT WEST starring The Three Stooges.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Hollywood Singing and Dancing: A Musical History - The 1920s: The Dawn of the Hollywood Musical (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      My Sweeter Than Sweet
      (uncredited)

      Music by Richard A. Whiting

      Lyrics by George Marion Jr.

      Performed by Nancy Carroll

      Also performed by Smith and chorus

      Also performed twice by The King's Men

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 18, 1930 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Sweetie
    • Filming locations
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 35 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Silent

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