American journalist Jo Anne Benson works for a popular travel magazine. Looking for interesting stories, she travels to South America, accompanied by dashing photographer Dan Jordan. Jo Anne... Read allAmerican journalist Jo Anne Benson works for a popular travel magazine. Looking for interesting stories, she travels to South America, accompanied by dashing photographer Dan Jordan. Jo Anne hopes to meet her fiancé Charlie Corker, who lives in South America. It appears however, ... Read allAmerican journalist Jo Anne Benson works for a popular travel magazine. Looking for interesting stories, she travels to South America, accompanied by dashing photographer Dan Jordan. Jo Anne hopes to meet her fiancé Charlie Corker, who lives in South America. It appears however, that Dan is in love with Jo Anne too. Complications will follow.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Lupita
- (as Isabelita)
- Specialty Act
- (as Rosario and Antonio)
- Specialty Act
- (as Rosario and Antonio)
- Specialty Act
- (as Harold and Lola)
- Specialty Act
- (as Harold and Lola)
- Orchestra Leader
- (as Chuy Reyes and His Orchestra)
- Samba Band Leader
- (as Nestor Amaral and His Samba Band)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Again, a very well directed and acted 40's musical! Must be - I have it on DVD and play it a least once a month.
In summary, if you get a chance to catch this movie on one of the movie channels do so, you won't regret it.
Dan Jordan (Phillip Terry) is given a special assignment - filming the most beautiful girls in South America - also with him is Jo Anne Benson (Audrey Long) as his assistant. Dan thinks she is just another conquest but she is really just stringing him along so she can get to Rio and see her real fiancé.
The story is just an excuse to string together some Latin acts ranging from Carmen Miranda "wannabees", guitarists (both male and female) and a pair of dancers performing a pasa doble. There is a rendition of "Baba Lu" (the song that became Desi Arnez's signature tune) - the singer here performs with great drama and an excellent "insect" dance is included (it would have been very dramatic in colour).
Robert Benchley does a comic turn as he explains the mysteries of the Samba. My mother thought Robert Benchley was the funniest man ever but in my opinion he is definitely an acquired taste.
In the post titled "Just Doesn't Cut It", the writer commented: "The contrived plot is a boy-meets-girl story, interrupted by musical performances of Latin American artists, some of which were Carmen Miranda wannabees, and none of which were memorable or even particularly good." Um... amazingly inaccurate! If only for his presence alone, Miguelito Valdes is one of the LEGENDARY vocalists and band leaders of the Latin-American popular/tropical music genre. You could think of him as a combination of two notable U.S. artists: r&b legend Jackie Wilson (from a stylistic standpoint), and crooner Tony Bennett (as far as his 'stature' within the Latin pop music genre). So... to It was actually Mr. Valdes who popularized the song "Babalu" throughout Latin-America and the U.S. in the late 1930's. Likely because of Mr. Valdes obvious African blood, he was denied the opportunity to perform it in the Broadway show "Too Many Girls." The role ultimately was given to white-Cuban actor Desi Arnaz, a more 'traditionally handsome' man (to 1940's North American eyes) who parlayed the Broadway success into an MGM contract. While Desi Arnaz was himself a charismatic performer (a decent actor and visionary television producer), he had nowhere near the vocal presence of Miguelito Valdes (Arnaz himself would have laughed at the mere notion of a comparison...).
Sprinkled throughout the film are also rare appearances by folks like the legendary Brazilian composer and band leader Nestor Amaral - the musician who accompanied Carmen Miranda to the U.S. in 1940(!). Antonio and Rosario performed to great acclaim internationally, and performed in a number of Hollywood musicals. After their breakup, their careers continued with success. Antonio would eventually become the Director of the Nacional Ballet de Espana! Chuy Reyes, who led the 'house' Latin band at Hollywood's glamorous Mocambo for years.
The point is, while they may not be major "cross-over" names like Xavier Cugat, this film is an important document of some very influential Hispanic performers. To 'dismiss' them as cut-rate is simply wrong.
Did you know
- TriviaJane Greer's first film.
- GoofsThe film is a series of flashbacks as Charlie tells a story at the beginning of the premiere of a new stage show starring "Miss Pan-American" and featuring about 20 Pan-American beauties. Each flashback ends with a performance that is being projected onto a movie screen at the theater. After the first two flashbacks, Charlie appears briefly to list the countries they visited in-between flashbacks. After the final flashback, the movie screen rises directly to a Mexican dance performance as the other beauties hold flags and watch. The end. Problems with this framing include the lack of any motion picture photography happening leading up to each flashback's closing performance. The four main characters were on a whirlwind tour to take still photos in 21 countries over 7 weeks and were never shown interacting with any film crews. Also, Charlie's explanation of the genesis of the stage show and the total time of the performance clips takes much more time than the one live performance closing the show. That's a pretty lame excuse for a stage production, especially after going through all the expense and paperwork to transport over 20 ladies from their respective nations. And they never bother to announce which of the women is Miss Pan-American.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Hollywood the Golden Years: The RKO Story: It's All True (1987)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 24 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1