Clarabel lives on a Kentucky horse farm and has a special love for the filly Glory. With the help of Chad, Clarabel can prevent Glory's sale and keep her to train her and eventually enter he... Read allClarabel lives on a Kentucky horse farm and has a special love for the filly Glory. With the help of Chad, Clarabel can prevent Glory's sale and keep her to train her and eventually enter her for the Kentucky Derby.Clarabel lives on a Kentucky horse farm and has a special love for the filly Glory. With the help of Chad, Clarabel can prevent Glory's sale and keep her to train her and eventually enter her for the Kentucky Derby.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Eddie Arcaro
- Jockey on Laniher
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Walter Bacon
- Derby Spectator
- (uncredited)
Bill Baldwin
- Brooklyn Dodgers Announcer
- (uncredited)
Madge Blake
- Aunt Martha
- (uncredited)
Stanley Blystone
- Derby Spectator
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Just a fun film-Especially for people who love the Horse Racing Game and it's history. A lot of good one liners and humor from Walter badgering with the other old timer (lady). I would love to own this movie. A lot of history will be lost if this film is not made available to the general public. Where is The Classic Movie Channel when you need them? A lot was accomplished in this tight budget movie. The film footage of the actual Kentucky Derby for the year is enough in itself to justify releasing it on video. People love these types of movies, Look at Dreamer, and of course the very well Done Seabiscuit. What a nice addition it would be for the JOckey Club or other Race related industry.
10tday-1
Neat little film of coming of age Margaret O'Brien owning and training racehorse. The production values are nice,there's a nice bunch of character actors. Maggie looks sweet in fifties-era dresses. It's not Medea but it's a fun enough racetrack drama with some music put in. A commenter mentioned Maggie's singing, she was dubbed by the Champagne Lady herself,Norma Zimmer. Charlotte Greenwood and Walter Brennan are great as always. For some reason RKO in the fifties had the nicest color photography and it's on display here. Definitely an enjoyable movie to watch. The only complaint some viewers might have is that this film seems more like a forties film rather than a fifties. Hollywood was still trying to recycle old formulas in its attempt to keep its' head above water. Unfortunately,this film didn't lead to a grown-up career for Margaret o'Brien as it should have.
A perfectly dreadful film that was poorly directed especially in the comedy sequences where in the Director Butler's idea of comedy is to have his actors gesture wildly and contort themselves making the audience more nauseous than merry. Margaret O'Brien was a complete horror..I suppose some found her cute when she was small,I always found her contrived and cold..lite years away from Shirley Temple! Here she proves herself to be the consummate amateur constantly looking at the camera with the glazed look of an anvil hitting her over the head! The songs that she is armed with are certainly musical bombs altho I will admit that she has a passable voice.. I would recommend this film for friends to assist you in laughing at it's unintentional humor and throw old shoes at the screen..Pity that this was Charolette Greenwood's last performance,but not even this great lady can save this train wreck with hooves.
Bit of fluff about a teenage girl named Clarabel (child actress Margaret O'Brien in a grown-up role), living in a trailer on a Kentucky horse ranch, who falls in love - with the new little chestnut filly just born on the ranch, who she names "Glory". When Glory becomes a yearling, Clarabel's "Gram" (Charlotte Greenwood) puts the horse up for sale (she has warned Clarabel to "never fall in love with one horse") for they need the money badly - but sad, sad Clarabel is helped out by local millionaire youth Chad and a horse doctor who prevents the sale. Clarabel and Chad have tons in common since, after all, all he talks about is horses, apparently - one problem, it's rumored he is engaged to one Candy Trent, who is one rich stuck-up snob. Well, Glory is trained for racing and proves to be a fast runner, and Clarabel decides to enter her prized horse in the "Kentucky Derby", even though it's rare for a filly to have a chance to win against the colts.
This film is a decent B-movie with a racehorse theme, mildly entertaining, painlessly pleasant. It oddly switches gear about the middle of the way through into a semi-musical (with several rather mediocre songs thrown in). Clarabel plays guitar and sings to her horse, then suddenly she is heard in the stables by a good-looking radio celebrity and hired to sing on his show, a second little romance to follow for her (but you just know she'll always be loyal to horse-lovin' Chad). There is a bit of history of thoroughbreds related at the beginning of the film including a shot of real-life Triple Crown winning race horse Citation; the finale features real footage of a Kentucky Derby race. For fans of Margaret O'Brien, it is so nice to see her in one of her almost adult roles - she's a charmer, but unfortunately the weak script doesn't really give her much of a chance to shine here. A side story features favorite character actor Walter Brennan as her "Uncle Ned" who constantly bickers and yells back and forth with Clarabel's Gram (but it appears they secretly really like each other!). Cute, lightly entertaining film - nothing great though.
This film is a decent B-movie with a racehorse theme, mildly entertaining, painlessly pleasant. It oddly switches gear about the middle of the way through into a semi-musical (with several rather mediocre songs thrown in). Clarabel plays guitar and sings to her horse, then suddenly she is heard in the stables by a good-looking radio celebrity and hired to sing on his show, a second little romance to follow for her (but you just know she'll always be loyal to horse-lovin' Chad). There is a bit of history of thoroughbreds related at the beginning of the film including a shot of real-life Triple Crown winning race horse Citation; the finale features real footage of a Kentucky Derby race. For fans of Margaret O'Brien, it is so nice to see her in one of her almost adult roles - she's a charmer, but unfortunately the weak script doesn't really give her much of a chance to shine here. A side story features favorite character actor Walter Brennan as her "Uncle Ned" who constantly bickers and yells back and forth with Clarabel's Gram (but it appears they secretly really like each other!). Cute, lightly entertaining film - nothing great though.
We were all pulling for Maggie O'Brien back then. She had been a child star in the early 40s and we all fell in love with her. So, when he was a teen ager and made this film at 17, we wanted her to make it. Alas, it wasn't in the cards. Even the great character actors Walter Brennan, Charlotte Greenwood and Sasha Kinsky couldn't add to a racehorse story that stirred about as much excitement as watching a dog scratch fleas. She played the guitar, looked cute and tried to be charming but that's a far as it went.
Her age mate, Jane Fonda, was waiting in the wings and would take off. Both Margret O'Brien and Jane Fonda were born the same year but Jane had the talent and Maggie couldn't market hers.
Such are the blessings of the muses. If this film rolls around sometime on the late show-- there's no video or DVD at this writing-- give it a look-see. Maggie was cute and talented. It's worth seeing.
Her age mate, Jane Fonda, was waiting in the wings and would take off. Both Margret O'Brien and Jane Fonda were born the same year but Jane had the talent and Maggie couldn't market hers.
Such are the blessings of the muses. If this film rolls around sometime on the late show-- there's no video or DVD at this writing-- give it a look-see. Maggie was cute and talented. It's worth seeing.
Did you know
- TriviaThe Kentucky Derby archival footage was the actual 1955 race, won by Swaps, who played "Glory" in the film (Willie Shoemaker up), over over Nashua (Eddie Arcaro up).
- ConnectionsReferenced in Le choix de...: Prima Donna (1956)
- SoundtracksGlory
Music by M.K. Jerome
Lyrics by Ted Koehler
Sung by Byron Palmer (uncredited) and Margaret O'Brien (uncredited) (dubbed by Norma Zimmer) (uncredited)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 40 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 2.00 : 1
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