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Three Sailors and a Girl

  • 1953
  • Approved
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
507
YOUR RATING
Three Sailors and a Girl (1953)
Buddy ComedyPop MusicalStand-UpComedyMusical

Three navy men run into a shady producer who convinces them to invest into his new show. When they meet the show's female star attraction, they're sold. Have they become the latest showbiz p... Read allThree navy men run into a shady producer who convinces them to invest into his new show. When they meet the show's female star attraction, they're sold. Have they become the latest showbiz players or just three more suckers?Three navy men run into a shady producer who convinces them to invest into his new show. When they meet the show's female star attraction, they're sold. Have they become the latest showbiz players or just three more suckers?

  • Director
    • Roy Del Ruth
  • Writers
    • Roland Kibbee
    • Devery Freeman
    • George S. Kaufman
  • Stars
    • Jane Powell
    • Gordon MacRae
    • Gene Nelson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    507
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Roy Del Ruth
    • Writers
      • Roland Kibbee
      • Devery Freeman
      • George S. Kaufman
    • Stars
      • Jane Powell
      • Gordon MacRae
      • Gene Nelson
    • 14User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos30

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    Top cast71

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    Jane Powell
    Jane Powell
    • Penny Weston
    Gordon MacRae
    Gordon MacRae
    • 'Choirboy' Jones
    Gene Nelson
    Gene Nelson
    • Twitch
    Sam Levene
    Sam Levene
    • Joe Woods
    George Givot
    George Givot
    • Emilio Rossi
    Veda Ann Borg
    Veda Ann Borg
    • Faye Foss
    Archer MacDonald
    Archer MacDonald
    • Melvin Webster
    Raymond Greenleaf
    Raymond Greenleaf
    • B.P. Morrow - Bank President
    Henry Slate
    • Hank the Sailor
    Jack E. Leonard
    Jack E. Leonard
    • Porky
    Murray Alper
    Murray Alper
    • Marine
    • (uncredited)
    Jerry Antes
    Jerry Antes
    • Dancer
    • (uncredited)
    John Baer
    John Baer
    • Sailor
    • (uncredited)
    Hal Bell
    • Sailor
    • (uncredited)
    David Bond
    David Bond
    • Moss Hart
    • (uncredited)
    Tex Brodus
    • Sailor
    • (uncredited)
    Paul Burke
    Paul Burke
    • Actor
    • (uncredited)
    Steve Carruthers
    Steve Carruthers
    • Nightclub Patron
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Roy Del Ruth
    • Writers
      • Roland Kibbee
      • Devery Freeman
      • George S. Kaufman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    6.0507
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    Featured reviews

    7SimonJack

    Sailors with money? Where to put it - Wall Street or Broadway?

    "Three Sailors and a Girl" is a lighthearted comedy musical, the only film that Jane Powell and Gordon MacRae made together. It includes Gene Nelson who was teamed with MacRae in a number of films. The boys are in the Navy and just docked at the Brooklyn Navy Yards for a month's ship repairs. They've been at sea eight months, and their pay is burning a hole in their pockets. They all have a 30-day furlough.

    Most of the guys talk about living it up. That usually means a few nights of booze and girls, and then their money is all gone. But Choirboy Jones (Gordon MacRae) says he plans to invest his money to make it grow and amount to something. He said he's going to double - maybe triple his money, and he's heading for Wall Street. Well, it convinces a whole crew to chip in a chunk of their money for the same purpose. So, Choirboy is tabbed with two buddies, Twitch (Gene Nelson) and Porky (Jack E. Leonard) to invest a duffel bag full of dough -- $50,000.

    But when they go to the top Wall Street investment firm of Morrow and Peabodu, they get sidetracked and conned into investing in a Broadway show. It happens to star a new singer, Penny Weston (Jane Powell), and a known actor, Emilio Rossi (played by George Givot). The original investor is Melvin Webster (played by Archer MacDonald) who wanted his play to be produced. His terrible plot is constantly being rewritten. After the promoter, Joe Woods (Sam Levene), gets into too many troubles, he sells the rights to the show to the guys. These musically talented gobs get more backing from the Army, the Air Force and the Marines, and put on a dazzling show. It all works out for the best in the end, and in a stroke of justice, Joe gets the show back and the boys double the money for the Navy guys.

    There's lots of comedy, very good music and dancing and a nice romance in this film that people should still enjoy well into the 21st century. Watch for the Burt Lancaster cameo at the end. Here are some favorite lines.

    Faye Foss, "Where would sailors get that kind of money?" Joe Woods, "How do I know? Maybe they're pirates."

    Joe Woods, "We'll get married as soon as I get a hit. I wouldn't want a swell doll like you to marry a failure." Faye, "Oh, thanks."

    Penny Weston, "But I wanna be an actress. I don't wanna make people like me just to get their money." Joe Woods, "Well, that's what every good actress does to every audience."

    Melvin Webster, "Mr. Woods, I wrote a play about my childhood - a tragedy. You turned it into a musical comedy. Then you started changing scenes to get in stars. Now it's a ruin - no story, just scenes. We even have a scene of Shanghai to pay off the man who does your laundry."

    Joe Woods, "Fail? Who said we failed?" Porky, "Just the audience and the critics."
    3mossgrymk

    3 sailors and a goil

    The title should tip you off that inventiveness and originality will be in severely rationed supply here.
    7marcslope

    First-rate second-rate musical

    Warners borrowed Jane Powell from MGM in 1953 and put her in a Doris Day kind of role, as an up- and-coming Broadway leading lady starring in Sam Levene's not-very-integrated-looking musical. Together they charm sailors Gordon MacRae, Gene Nelson, and Jack E. Leonard (trying to be Jackie Gleason, the Fat Funny One) into investing, and turn an out-of-town flop into a Broadway smash. Not an original story by any means, but it's lively, and the Sammy Fain-Sammy Cahn songs are good. It seems stinting of the screenwriters not to write in a girlfriend for Nelson, who has two spectacular tap numbers, and the no-name supporting characters (Georges Givot as a temperamental Ezio Pinza-like basso, somebody else as the sarcastic secretary, somebody else as the doofus playwright) don't have much interesting to do. But the songs and dances are really lively, and it's a chance to see Levene playing a Nathan Detroit-like schemer at the top of his form. MGM was making better musicals, even Warners was, but this one's an unpretentious good time.
    5SnoopyStyle

    borderline musical

    'Choirboy' Jones (Gordon MacRae), Twitch, and Porky are sailors on a US submarine. They are docking in Brooklyn for extensive repairs. The Captain gives the boys 30-day leave. Jones tells the crew that they're going to waste all their pay. Instead, he convinces them to collect their pay, fifty guys with $1k each, and invest it. The trio first head to the stock market. Producer Joe Woods (Sam Levene) and singer Penny Weston (Jane Powell) are there to pitch a Broadway show. They are thrown out of the building. The trio follows the lady with the legs.

    I don't love opera or the crooning. Otherwise, I'm fine with the songs. Nothing stands out. There is a basic problem with Choirboy. He has to be smart enough for the guys to trust him with their money. Yet, he's dumb enough to invest in a Broadway show. The solution should be that he's a finance nerd who falls head over heels for Penny. That's the sweet spot to hit. I can do without the black-face joke, but it's the 50's. The story is a mess and I don't care much about it. Gordon MacRae is still not star material as far as I'm concerned. I do love Jane Powell. All in all, this is a borderline musical.
    7F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    "When we anchor for what we hanker..."

    Roy Del Ruth was a talented second-rung director who spent his career shunting from one studio to another, never achieving the valuable symbiosis which boosted the careers of better-known directors who dedicated their talents primarily to one particular studio (such as Ford at Fox, Walsh at Warners, Capra at Columbia, Minnelli at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer). 'Three Sailors and a Girl', a brassy musical comedy directed by Del Ruth for Warner Brothers, is an uncredited remake of 'Born to Dance', a 1936 musical directed by Del Ruth for MGM. 'Born to Dance' has better production values, a better cast and a better score (Jimmy Stewart warbling Cole Porter!), but 'Three Sailors and a Girl' is very enjoyable in its own right ... and its plot has almost nothing to do with George S. Kaufman's play 'The Butter and Egg Man', which is inexplicably listed in the credits here as source material.

    'Born to Dance' and 'Three Sailors and a Girl' have exactly the same plot: a Navy submarine docks in New York, and three sailors (a singer, a dancer and a funny guy) go ashore. They meet a musically talented actress named Powell who deserves to be a star, and they pool their efforts to make her the star of a hit Broadway musical (as sailors do). In 'Born to Dance', the actress is vivacious tap-dancer Eleanor Powell. In 'Three Sailors and a Girl', the actress is Jane Powell (more brassy than usual, but quite good). The three sailors -- with the unfortunate nicknames Porky, Twitch and Choirboy -- are played by Jack E. Leonard (the funny guy), Gene Nelson (the dancer) and Gordon MacRae (the singer and romantic lead). MacRae was never better than his material, so here he's much less interesting than he was in 'Oklahoma!' and 'Carousel'. Gene Nelson is excellent as the acrobatic dancer, although he too has been better elsewhere.

    The real find in this movie is Jack E. Leonard, a vulgar and heavy-set insult comic who pre-dated Don Rickles, and who is not normally considered an actor. He's not very good here, but he's better than I expected him to be, and he might have had a decent career in supporting roles. His 'singing' voice is nothing to boast about, although he acquits himself well alongside Nelson and MacRae in the opening number (a snappy ditty called 'Oh, So Right!'), and he's decent enough in a (poor) comedy number with Jane Powell: 'Show me a happy woman, and I'll show you a miserable man.' Leonard also does a comedy monologue which isn't funny, and which relies heavily on a ludicrous costume and a penguin walk. Jack E. Leonard was severely overweight: a fact which shouldn't have disqualified him from movie roles, but which renders him utterly implausible here in the role of an active-duty sailor. Even more implausibly, the three sailors finance their Broadway musical by having a whip-round among their shipmates (yes, we all know that sailors have got lots of money socked away) ... and then, when these funds prove insufficient, they get further backing from the Marines. (Yes, we all know that the Navy and the Marines always work hand in hand towards mutual goals.) Still, this is a fun movie, and I don't want to dissect the plot line.

    Sam Levene, giving his usual performance, is quite good as the sharpy who produces the Broadway musical ... which of course is a hit. There's a totally unexpected (and very funny) cameo appearance by Burt Lancaster as a leatherneck, which leads to Levene speaking the funniest line in the movie.

    Except for that Powell/Leonard duet, the songs (by Sammy Fain and Sammy Cahn) are excellent: very nearly as good as Cole Porter's score for 'Born to Dance'. I'll rate 'Three Sailors and a Girl' 7 points out of 10. Delightful!

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    Musical

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Jane Powell's off-screen romance with Gene Nelson ended her marriage, but Nelson's wife refused to give him a divorce. Nelson directed Powell in a segment of the made-for-TV anthology movie Les lettres (1973).
    • Quotes

      Marine: [tapping him on the shoulder] Pardon me, Mr. Woods.

      Joe Woods: [without turning round] Yeah?

      Marine: I'm with the Marine outfit that's backing the show and I, I hear the Navy is taking your leading man tonight.

      Joe Woods: Don't worry about it, I'll get another.

      Marine: I know. That's what I wanted to talk to you about, Sir. You see, I was wondering if, maybe you could er... what I mean to say is, you see I used to be with the circus once and friends of mine think that I have great deal of, well I don't mean to sound conceited, I was...

      Joe Woods: [he turns to look] Sorry son, I know talent the minute it taps me on the shoulder, you just ain't got it, Kid.

      Faye Foss: Gosh, Joe, weren't you a little rough on that boy? I thought he had something.

      Joe Woods: Kindest thing I ever did for him. Never get anywhere in this business. Looks too much like Burt Lancaster.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Des monstres attaquent la ville (1954)
    • Soundtracks
      You're But Oh, So Right
      (uncredited)

      Music by Sammy Fain

      Lyrics by Sammy Cahn

      Sung by Gordon MacRae, Gene Nelson, and Jack E. Leonard

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 23, 1953 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • 3 Sailors and a Girl
    • Filming locations
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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