Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueTwo rival radio producers try to get the same sponsor, so they try to top each other with new ideas.Two rival radio producers try to get the same sponsor, so they try to top each other with new ideas.Two rival radio producers try to get the same sponsor, so they try to top each other with new ideas.
Photos
Billy Bletcher
- Singer - 'Alouette'
- (uncredited)
Wheaton Chambers
- Rev. Allen - Contestant
- (uncredited)
Joe DeRita
- Mr. Hinkley
- (uncredited)
Johnny Duncan
- Jitterbugger
- (uncredited)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesBased on a popular radio game show of the same name, in which contestants were asked to perform various stunts. It was hosted by Art Baker (I) and Art Linkletter. It spawned a TV show, "People Are Funny" (1954), hosted by Linkletter.
- Citations
Leroy Brinker: I don't like the tone of what you're not saying!
- Bandes originalesI'm in the Mood for Love
Music by Jimmy McHugh
Lyrics by Dorothy Fields
Sung by Frances Langford with chorus
Commentaire en vedette
If you like old time radio as I do than People Are Funny, a fictionalized account of how the program came to be than you'll enjoy the film. Maybe you won't have too critical an eye for flaws.
It's quite an eclectic group of stars that Pine-Thomas put together for this film from the Paramount B picture unit. The threadbare plot has Rudy Vallee the sponsor looking for a new radio show and having both rival agents Phillip Reed and Ozzie Nelson locating it in some cow county in Nevada. There's also Helen Walker who plays on both Ozzie and Phil for all its worth.
The program was created by Jack Haley who's playing the hick of hicks from said cow county. He gets taken on a magic carpet ride by Helen Walker in Hollywood. Much along the same lines that Jean Arthur took Gary Cooper in Mr. Deeds Goes To Town. Haley is far more a rube though.
We also had a vocal group, the Vagabonds doing all kinds of numbers. One was most distastefully done in blackface, probably the reason that the movie People Are Funny is not seen too often except on YouTube where I caught it. The version I caught regretfully cut out Frances Langford's number.
No one also had the presence of mind to have a duet number with Rudy Vallee and Ozzie Nelson, both popular radio crooners of the Thirties. No one thought of posterity in Hollywood, especially not when you were making B films.
The film is a mildly amusing one and is a historical curiosity.
It's quite an eclectic group of stars that Pine-Thomas put together for this film from the Paramount B picture unit. The threadbare plot has Rudy Vallee the sponsor looking for a new radio show and having both rival agents Phillip Reed and Ozzie Nelson locating it in some cow county in Nevada. There's also Helen Walker who plays on both Ozzie and Phil for all its worth.
The program was created by Jack Haley who's playing the hick of hicks from said cow county. He gets taken on a magic carpet ride by Helen Walker in Hollywood. Much along the same lines that Jean Arthur took Gary Cooper in Mr. Deeds Goes To Town. Haley is far more a rube though.
We also had a vocal group, the Vagabonds doing all kinds of numbers. One was most distastefully done in blackface, probably the reason that the movie People Are Funny is not seen too often except on YouTube where I caught it. The version I caught regretfully cut out Frances Langford's number.
No one also had the presence of mind to have a duet number with Rudy Vallee and Ozzie Nelson, both popular radio crooners of the Thirties. No one thought of posterity in Hollywood, especially not when you were making B films.
The film is a mildly amusing one and is a historical curiosity.
- bkoganbing
- 24 févr. 2015
- Lien permanent
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 33 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was People Are Funny (1946) officially released in Canada in English?
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