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IMDbPro

Hi De Ho

  • 1947
  • Approved
  • 1h 12m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
362
YOUR RATING
Hi De Ho (1947)
Musical

Cab Calloway plays himself in a plot about jealousy, night clubs, and gangsters. Ends with a series of musical numbers.Cab Calloway plays himself in a plot about jealousy, night clubs, and gangsters. Ends with a series of musical numbers.Cab Calloway plays himself in a plot about jealousy, night clubs, and gangsters. Ends with a series of musical numbers.

  • Director
    • Josh Binney
  • Writer
    • Hal Seeger
  • Stars
    • Cab Calloway
    • Ida James
    • Jeni Le Gon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    362
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Josh Binney
    • Writer
      • Hal Seeger
    • Stars
      • Cab Calloway
      • Ida James
      • Jeni Le Gon
    • 14User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos4

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    Top cast25

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    Cab Calloway
    Cab Calloway
    • Cab Calloway
    Ida James
    • Nettie
    Jeni Le Gon
    Jeni Le Gon
    • Minnie
    William Campbell
    • Sparks
    Virginia Girvin
    • Sparks' Girl Friend
    George Wiltshire
    • Boss Mason
    James Dunmore
    • Mo the Mouse
    Augustus Smith
    • Preacher
    Edgar Martin
    • Jive Club Owner
    Leonard Rogers
    • Ralph
    David Bethea
    • Brass Hat Club Owner
    Shepard Roberts
    • Police Sergeant
    Frederick Johnson
    • Headwaiter
    Ann Peters
    • Self - Singer
    Matty Peters
    • Self - Singer
    Virginia Vee
    • Self - Singer
    • (as Virginia Peters)
    Dusty Fletcher
    • Dusty Fletcher
    • (uncredited)
    'Panama' Francis
    • Self - Drummer in Cab Calloway's Small Band
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Josh Binney
    • Writer
      • Hal Seeger
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    5.8362
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    Featured reviews

    6Terrell-4

    This is a treat if you like Cab Calloway, and there's not much of a story to pay attention to

    Hi De Ho is one more of the quick, cheap movies cranked out by Hollywood featuring black entertainers and designed to fill seats in the movie houses for the segregated black audiences of the south and the unofficially but just as segregated theaters everywhere else. Hi De Ho is exceptional in one regard. It features that great showman and entertainer Cab Calloway in his prime and a year before he decided to disband his orchestra because of changing musical tastes. Calloway had a long career, and had become a star by 1930. He sang, moved (not exactly danced), strutted and jived. White audiences most probably learned what they knew about jump jazz, scat singing and the hep cat beat from Calloway. He was a fine singer, wrote a lot of his own stuff, and led one of the best swing orchestras around. He also seemed to have inexhaustible energy. So fair warning...Calloway's high energy pours out of this movie; watching it can wear you down after a while.

    The story line is little more than an excuse for Calloway and his orchestra to perform some great, driving, swing numbers. The movie is little more than an hour long and the plot is over in the first half hour. For the last half hour we watch a non-stop performance of some great music and specialty acts. The idea is that Cab is just starting out in the business. He has a jealous girlfriend, Minnie (Jeni Le Gon) and a new, young manager, Etta (Ida James), who is as pretty as his girlfriend. Etta wangles a gig for Cab and his orchestra at a new nightclub, but it's right across the street from one owned by a gangster. Minnie thinks Cab has fallen for Etta, so she convinces the mob boss to eliminate his new competition by shooting Cab. Then Minnie realizes her mistake, tries to save Cab and takes the bullet meant for him. This is the plot, and in 30 minutes it's all squeezed in between eight full musical numbers of him and his orchestra rehearsing or playing at the nightclub. Now we learn that Cab has become a huge success. For the next 30 minutes we're in a plush nightclub where we watch nine terrific numbers, including the rotund Peter Sisters, singers, and the extraordinary The Miller Brothers and Lois, tap dancers. A highlight is Calloway doing St. James Infirmary Blues. Another is a full-throttle, sophisticated arrangement of At Dawn Time. Although his now- dead former girlfriend was named Minnie and was something of a moocher, Calloway never sings his signature, Minnie the Moocher. The closest we get is Minnie Is a Hep Cat Now.

    The acting, except for Calloway, is dismal. But Cab Calloway and His Orchestra show why they were first-class musicians as well as first-class entertainers. If you've ever heard Cab Calloway sing, you'll hear his voice...

    "I was walkin' up the street feelin' bad and bold. Deep down in my pockets I didn't have no gold. I looked up to the skies and to my surprise I saw a million dollar bill floatin' before my eyes. Hey now..."
    6psteier

    For Cab Calloway fans

    The plot is thin and the acting is mostly wooden, but the real point of the movie is Cab Calloway's wonderful band and some specialty numbers, especially the finale that is the last third of the film.

    The best additional act is high powered tap dancing by Miller Bros. and Lois. Dusty Fletcher does his famous "Open the Door Richard" sketch in blackface. The Peters Sisters are curious but didn't do anything for me.
    7dahall-934-421671

    Great Film Entertainment!

    As with all the reviews, there's no real storyline, but you MUST watch for all the great performances. One of the reviews mentions Dusty Fletcher's "blackface" performance "Open the Door Richard" is in this film - it's not on my copy. However, there seems to be earlier versions of Hi-De-Ho released with different plots (1934) and (1937) so I'm not certain if my copy is bad copy (although I have 2 copies of 1947) or if that particular act is in one of the earlier releases...whatever the case, if you are into Cab Calloway - the performances are phenomenal! The same goes for the Miller Bros. & Lois. I actually like the Peters Sisters - they had great voices and my favorite numbers were "Rainy Sunday" and "Old Lady From Baltimore"...hope this helps!
    5cgvsluis

    Every flower loves a few drop!

    This was an all black cast platform to showcase the charismatic Cab Calloway. I think the best musical numbers were actually at the beginning, but it ends with a whole series of musical and tap dance numbers.

    Thin on plot, this is a surprisingly violent story that even depicts violence against women. It pits two competing night clubs against one another and ends in a shoot out where a woman and the mob club owner are both shot.

    "You think you'd be mine at dawn time."

    "Every flower loves a few drop...Gumbo has it's New Orleans"

    This is a great time piece and worth seeing for Cab Calloway alone.
    8Nozz

    Never dull when Cab Calloway is performing

    My jaw dropped shortly after the start of the movie, when Cab Calloway sang "Minnie's a Hepcat Now" solo a cappella. This was a big band leader who actually had all the music an audience needed right inside himself. An extraordinary performer; and though the rest of the movie is packed with an abundance of band numbers, he never allows a dull musical moment. Like some of the songs Cab Calloway sang, the 1947 HI-DE-HO movie mixes pathos and joie de vivre against the background of a gritty story. In a musical performance like the "Saint James Infirmary" seen here, the mixture is funny and powerful. In the plot line of the movie, it's less successful.

    Unfortunately, in the European TV broadcast I caught, I didn't notice that "Dusty Fletcher does his famous 'Open the Door Richard' sketch" as in the version someone else saw. An odd thing I did notice was that in the nightclub scenes when the plot is in its long suspension near the end, the dancers seem sized wrongly for the perspective, as if they were dancing in front of a screen on which the band was projected.

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    Related interests

    Julie Andrews in La Mélodie du bonheur (1965)
    Musical

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Goofs
      When Cab takes the wounded Minnie back into his room, the furniture has changed position - the bed is now away from the wall and in the middle of the room, and the chair is in the corner of the room where the bed used to be.
    • Connections
      Edited into Open the Door Richard (1947)
    • Soundtracks
      MINNIE'S A HEPCAT NOW
      Written by Cab Calloway (uncredited), Clarence Gaskill (uncredited) and Irving Mills (uncredited)

      Sung a capella by Cab Calloway

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 9, 1947 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • New York City, New York, USA
    • Production company
      • All-American
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 12m(72 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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