Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueSoldier Danny Miller returns home to Brooklyn after war. Aiming for singing success, he helps friends chasing dreams.Soldier Danny Miller returns home to Brooklyn after war. Aiming for singing success, he helps friends chasing dreams.Soldier Danny Miller returns home to Brooklyn after war. Aiming for singing success, he helps friends chasing dreams.
- Leo Kardos
- (as Billy Roy)
- Trustee
- (non crédité)
- Father
- (non crédité)
- Jitterbugging G.I.
- (non crédité)
- Man in Montage
- (non crédité)
- Corporal
- (non crédité)
- Minor Role
- (non crédité)
- Minor Role
- (non crédité)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAndré Previn, who provided the unseen piano solos for the film, received his first onscreen credit for Tout le monde chante (1947). Previn, who was only 17 at the time of production, had been a member of the M-G-M music department for several years prior to his work on this film. Previn went on to work as both a composer and conductor for many films and won a number of Academy® Awards before becoming principal conductor of the London Symphony and other internationally known orchestras.
- GaffesA running joke in the gym is that Danny is so skinny that he needs the weight of a baseball to make a teeter-totter descend. It goes up and down as he and Nick toss a baseball back and forth. At the last pass, the teeter-totter descends before Danny catches the ball.
- Citations
Nick Lombardi: Jamie, we're having a little argument. What color are Annie's eyes?
Jamie Shellgrove: Dark Brown. But in the light they've got little golden flecks.
Danny Webson Miller: How tall is she compared to you?
Jamie Shellgrove: When she's wearing high heels, she comes to here, and low heels, to here.
Danny Webson Miller: Uh, what color nail polish does she use?
Jamie Shellgrove: None. Her hands are like a little girl's. And that perfume she uses, that's like a little girl's too... so clean and soapy. But you know the cutest thing about her? You can always tells when she's going to smile. Just a second before she wrinkles up her nose. Always.
- Crédits fousOpening credits are shown over a drawing of the Brooklyn bridge.
- ConnexionsEdited into Brooklyn Bridge (1981)
- Bandes originalesWhose Baby Are You
(uncredited)
Lyrics by Sammy Cahn
Music by Jule Styne
Copyright 1947 by Sinatra Songs, Inc.
Sung briefly by Frank Sinatra while playing the piano (dubbed by André Previn)
Later sung and danced by Peter Lawford
Considering that this was all done in Hollywood, the film does have a nostalgic glow to it as it recaptures Brooklyn of 1947. Interspersed throughout the film are references to Brooklyn places and streets that a native would immediately know. There is a scene towards the beginning of the film when Frank Sinatra first meets Kathryn Grayson and she gives the newly discharged soldier a lift to the armory and in the background they pass shots of rows and rows of brownstone houses. Looks just like Park Slope on the way to the armory located there.
Sinatra has his personal songwriting team of Jule Styne and Sammy Cahn come up with a good selection of tunes for him. Time After Time was the biggest hit out of this film and that song is also repeated in good style by Kathryn Grayson. He does I Believe with Jimmy Durante and young Bobby Long who sings and dances up a storm in number done at a school gymnasium. It's a philosophical song in the style that Sinatra's rival Bing Crosby normally would have sung. He also sings a song Brooklyn Bridge, dedicated to same, on the footpath across. The footpath is deserted which is impossible. And there's another ballad entitled It's the Same Old Dream.
Jimmy Durante is the kindly school custodian who takes Sinatra in. I found this part of the picture sad. Durante has an apartment right on the public school premises and Sinatra moves in with him because he has no family at all. I guess he loved Brooklyn a lot because normally someone with no family and recently discharged from the service would have had the world to choose from in where to settle. Durante and Sinatra have a great old time with The Song Gotta Come From the Heart.
They did love sopranos over at the Lion studio. In addition to Grayson at one time they had Jeanette MacDonald, Ann Blyth, and Jane Powell all at the same time. Grayson had a porcelain delicacy to her and her voice that was magnetic, never more so here. She sings the Bell Song from Lakme and makes it memorable. Sinatra shows some guts here also as he and Grayson tackle La Ci Darem la Mano from Don Giovanni. Grayson and Mozart took it easy on Frank. Grayson did three films with Sinatra and in only one did she wind up with him.
Peter Lawford plays the shy gentlemanly scion of an aristocratic family who Sinatra befriends while in England. This was years before the Rat Pack was started and before Lawford married into the Kennedy clan. The role was no stretch for Lawford since that's what he was in real life. I wonder if Peter Lawford would still be here and have a career if the Kennedys and Sinatra had never entered his life.
And there were only minimal references to the Dodgers for a film about Brooklyn in a year they won the pennant.
- bkoganbing
- 2 sept. 2004
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 44 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1