Terry Arden (Evelyn Dall) travels to England to take over her half of her late father's dating service run by Arthur Bowman (Arthur Askey). An enjoyable musical comedy.Terry Arden (Evelyn Dall) travels to England to take over her half of her late father's dating service run by Arthur Bowman (Arthur Askey). An enjoyable musical comedy.Terry Arden (Evelyn Dall) travels to England to take over her half of her late father's dating service run by Arthur Bowman (Arthur Askey). An enjoyable musical comedy.
Hilda Campbell-Russell
- Cabaret Singer
- (uncredited)
Patricia Owens
- Miss London
- (uncredited)
Ronald Shiner
- Sailor Meredith
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
2 friends have an escort agency in London which is somewhat failing, until a 3rd partner becomes involved. She sees that the ladies engaged by the company have all been there for years, and sets about to find some fresh new faces, and lift the business up, and the best time to do it is when the soldiers are on leave. Watch this if you don't mind people breaking out into song at any given moment, and definitely keep your eyes peeled out for the 3 leads doing an hilarious Marx Brothers impersonation - their Harpo almost out-harps the original!
I really enjoyed this World War 2 musical comedy. Arthur Askey is at his most engaging as the singing head of a declining escort service in London. Evelyn Dall is a beautiful and business-savvy American who immediately takes charges by seeking beautiful women to work for the agency. These ladies are sexy, funny and can sing and dance as well. The highlight of the film is when Arthur does a wonderful take on Harpo Marx while Jack Train (who also does W.C Fields and Rochester) is a pitch perfect Chico and Evelyn does a turn a blond Groucho. It is a fun movie to watch on a lovely spring night. These old British comedies of the Thirties and Forties have a great deal of spirit and heart to them.
If you like witty dialogue, fine comic acting, 1940s songs and dances, and lots of beautiful girls, this is a film for you.
Arthur Askey can be a bit wearing on his own but here he has to share the limelight with other talented performers and is possibly outshone by the two leading ladies, the sophisticated American Evelyn Dall and the naïve English Anne Shelton. Anybody who has had to wait at Waterloo Station will enjoy Shelton's role as the announcer.
Full of brief spoofs and some prolonged parodies. We get Askey and Dall doing a routine as Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers and, with Ronald Shiner in addition, as the three Marx Brothers. Crazier still, to get into a smart hotel the Askey character pretends to be the real-life Arthur Askey, complete with catchphrases and mannerisms.
Arthur Askey can be a bit wearing on his own but here he has to share the limelight with other talented performers and is possibly outshone by the two leading ladies, the sophisticated American Evelyn Dall and the naïve English Anne Shelton. Anybody who has had to wait at Waterloo Station will enjoy Shelton's role as the announcer.
Full of brief spoofs and some prolonged parodies. We get Askey and Dall doing a routine as Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers and, with Ronald Shiner in addition, as the three Marx Brothers. Crazier still, to get into a smart hotel the Askey character pretends to be the real-life Arthur Askey, complete with catchphrases and mannerisms.
Is it a musical, is it a comedy, is it a play, the answer is all three. In the Vaudeville tradition this movie has a little bit of everything. A few scenes with clever word play and jokes. A few scenes with a physical comedy sketch. A couple of dance acts, and a few unmemorable songs. The fascinating thing about this movie is that this film would have appealed to older audiences of the time, people in their 50s & 60s longing for a simpler happier time. Mums and dads left behind to hold the fort and raise the grand-kids as all the young people went off to war.
The plot is quite light and unimaginative so as not to distract from the vaudeville routines inserted into it. An American lady arrives in London to claim her half of a failing escort business, with her enthusiasm and a new staff of good looking girls she brings it back to life. Best scene in this film is where the leading man does a comedy routine with a piano. "Ladies cloak room" Ho Ho Ho how very mildly ribald (just the right sort of humour for an audience of older people born in the 1890s)
The plot is quite light and unimaginative so as not to distract from the vaudeville routines inserted into it. An American lady arrives in London to claim her half of a failing escort business, with her enthusiasm and a new staff of good looking girls she brings it back to life. Best scene in this film is where the leading man does a comedy routine with a piano. "Ladies cloak room" Ho Ho Ho how very mildly ribald (just the right sort of humour for an audience of older people born in the 1890s)
If you are American as I am you may not care much for British musicals but this is one to try. It stars Arthur Askey, a diminutive Britisher who can sing a bit, dance a bit, play the piano and make lots of humorous quips. I know little about him but found him genial enough and rather amusing. The stronger reason to watch this film is EVELYN DALL. She was actually an American in real life who emigrated to England because her American career was going nowhere and a popular British bandleader named Ambrose saw her in a traveling American show in England and offered her the female singing job in his band. She stayed in England for the war years and became known as the "Bronx Bombshell" for her performances in skimpy costuming and her lovely features. She became enormously popular there as a vivacious singer and comedienne and this film shows you why. She seems willing to try anything-- check out her hilarious jitterbug dance near the film's end as well as her impression of Groucho Marx. Her acting is exemplary as she listens and reacts so convincingly to the other principals. There is also a sense of genuine friendship and respect among the principals of this film that is contagious. Their scenes are well rehearsed and their personal chemistry, especially that of Arthur and Evelyn is palpable. In his autobiography Arthur Askey expressed his great fondness for her. So for you Americans here is a British World War II musical to try and perhaps Evelyn's most fun film. I will likely rank this higher than you might but I still think it's a charming, cute wartime effort that you are likely to enjoy.
Did you know
- TriviaThe phrase, "Honi soit qui mal y pense" and parts of it are used several times in the film. This phrase, meaning "evil to him that thinks evil of it", is the motto of the Order of the Garter, one of the UK's highest awards.
- ConnectionsReferences Le Fantôme de l'opéra (1925)
- SoundtracksA Fine How Do You Do
(uncredited)
Words and Music by Val Guest and Manning Sherwin
Sung by Evelyn Dall, Arthur Askey and Jack Train
Danced by Richard Hearne and Evelyn Dall
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Miss London Limited
- Filming locations
- Gaumont-British Studios, Lime Grove, Shepherd's Bush, London, England, UK(studio: made at the Gaumont - British Studios, London.)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 39 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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