VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,6/10
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LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA young lady from Georgia goes to Hollywood in the hopes of becoming an actress.A young lady from Georgia goes to Hollywood in the hopes of becoming an actress.A young lady from Georgia goes to Hollywood in the hopes of becoming an actress.
- Premi
- 2 vittorie totali
Sidney Bracey
- Dramatic Director
- (as Sidney Bracy)
Renée Adorée
- Renée Adorée
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
George K. Arthur
- George K. Arthur
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Gordon Avil
- Gordon Avil
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Eleanor Boardman
- Roxalanne de Lavedan in 'Bardelys the Magnificent'
- (filmato d'archivio)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Symona Boniface
- Guest
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Charles Chaplin
- Charles Chaplin
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Ray Cooke
- Director's Assistant
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Harry Crocker
- Harry Crocker
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe well known faces appearing in the banquet scene are, in the order they appear on screen: Dorothy Sebastian, Louella Parsons, Estelle Taylor, Claire Windsor, Aileen Pringle, Karl Dane, George K. Arthur, Leatrice Joy, Renée Adorée, Rod La Rocque, Mae Murray, John Gilbert, Norma Talmadge, Douglas Fairbanks, Marion Davies, and William S. Hart.
- Citazioni
Charles Chaplin: [Talking to Peggy] Will you please sign my album? I'm crazy about signatures.
[Leaves after getting Peggy's autograph]
Peggy Pepper: Who is that little guy?
Billy Boone: Charlie Chaplin.
[Shocked, Peggy faints]
- Versioni alternativeKevin Brownlow led a 1982 restoration of Show People which used a new score composed and conducted by Carl Davis. In addition, a short outtake of Billy Boone showing Peggy how to put on makeup was added.
- ConnessioniEdited into Hollywood: The Dream Factory (1972)
- Colonne sonoreCalifornia, Here I Come
(1924) (uncredited)
Music by Joseph Meyer
Played during the opening scene of Hollywood
Recensione in evidenza
Another superb production from King Vidor (The Big Parade, The Crowd, The Citadel, The Champ, War and Peace, Northwest Passage, Our Daily Bread). Vidor's movies are always well directed (the way the camera tells the story can not be faulted), but sometimes the performances are not good (in Our Daily Bread, for example), or the movie as a whole is not good. But this is one of Vidor's really great ones. Remembered as one of the only occasions Marion Davies was allowed to play comedy by sugar-daddy and executive producer William Randolph Hearst (a.k.a Citizen Kane), also known as her best movie. She plays comedy wonderfully - which makes it a shame that Hearst thought that to be a "serious actress" meant costume dramas.
Which is actually what this movie is about. It has so many elements of Davies' own story, also told in rather comic-book fashion through Susan Alexander in Citizen Kane. Here, Peggy Pepper (Marion Davies) is brought to Hollywood by her fat, seemingly rich, hick father, in order to become a serious movie actress. She gets signed by a certain studio, without knowing they are a comedy studio similar to Mack Sennet's pie-throwing studio, and sort of falls into getting known as a comic actress, as well as falling in love with a kind clown named Billy Boone (William Haines). As in Vidor' The Citadel, she starts off doing the ideal thing (having fun and playing comedy), and gets seduced from this path by others. She is signed by the "High Arts" studio, where she is encouraged to act hoity-toity and associate with the "Hollywood elite," thereby ignoring all her old friends, including Billy Boone.
Show People is a really great comedy - really fun, really well made, well acted, written, and has the delightful value of featuring cameos from many silent legends including Chaplin, Fairbanks, Gilbert, cowboy William S Hart and others. Cameo value is also added by Vidor himself, who pokes fun at himself as a director of war movies when he appears doing just that in the final sequence, and as a director of "high art." At one point Peggy and Billy are at the movies having just seen their latest movie, which is to be followed by Vidor's production "Bardley's the Magnificent" (a real Vidor film from 2 years before). Peggy wants to stay and watch it, and Billy says in not so many words: what would you want to watch such pretensious rubbish for?
Which is actually what this movie is about. It has so many elements of Davies' own story, also told in rather comic-book fashion through Susan Alexander in Citizen Kane. Here, Peggy Pepper (Marion Davies) is brought to Hollywood by her fat, seemingly rich, hick father, in order to become a serious movie actress. She gets signed by a certain studio, without knowing they are a comedy studio similar to Mack Sennet's pie-throwing studio, and sort of falls into getting known as a comic actress, as well as falling in love with a kind clown named Billy Boone (William Haines). As in Vidor' The Citadel, she starts off doing the ideal thing (having fun and playing comedy), and gets seduced from this path by others. She is signed by the "High Arts" studio, where she is encouraged to act hoity-toity and associate with the "Hollywood elite," thereby ignoring all her old friends, including Billy Boone.
Show People is a really great comedy - really fun, really well made, well acted, written, and has the delightful value of featuring cameos from many silent legends including Chaplin, Fairbanks, Gilbert, cowboy William S Hart and others. Cameo value is also added by Vidor himself, who pokes fun at himself as a director of war movies when he appears doing just that in the final sequence, and as a director of "high art." At one point Peggy and Billy are at the movies having just seen their latest movie, which is to be followed by Vidor's production "Bardley's the Magnificent" (a real Vidor film from 2 years before). Peggy wants to stay and watch it, and Billy says in not so many words: what would you want to watch such pretensious rubbish for?
- Ben_Cheshire
- 11 apr 2004
- Permalink
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Celebre anche come
- Show People
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 1.100.000 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 23 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.20 : 1
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