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7,4/10
8861
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA woman thinks a flirting man is the co-respondent her lawyer has hired to expedite her divorce.A woman thinks a flirting man is the co-respondent her lawyer has hired to expedite her divorce.A woman thinks a flirting man is the co-respondent her lawyer has hired to expedite her divorce.
- Vincitore di 1 Oscar
- 1 vittoria e 5 candidature totali
Norman Ainsley
- Undetermined Role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Jimmy Aubrey
- Undetermined Role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Finis Barton
- Undetermined Role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Eleanor Bayley
- Dancer
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
De Don Blunier
- Chorus Girl
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Pokey Champion
- Dancer
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Jack Chefe
- Night Club Patron
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe musical number "The Continental" lasts 17 1/2 minutes, the longest number ever in a musical until Gene Kelly's 18 1/2-minute ballet at the end of Un americano a Parigi (1951) 17 years later. It is also the longest musical number in all of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers' films together.
- BlooperCrew member coughs after the chase scene, picnic basket on running board and he's going through item list directly after she says, "After that."
- Citazioni
Tonetti: [unable to remember his passphrase "Chance is a fool's name for fate," Tonettie repeatedly muffs it] Chance is the foolish name for fate. / Give me a name for chance and I am a fool. / Fate is a foolish thing to take chances with. / I am a fate to take foolish chances with. / Chances are that fate is foolish. / Fate is the foolish thing. Take a chance.
- Versioni alternativeIn the version of the movie released in Brazil in the 1930s, the Brazilian actor Raul Roulien sang in the musical number "The Continental".
- ConnessioniEdited into L'ora del destino (1942)
- Colonne sonoreDon't Let It Bother You
(1934)
Music and Lyrics by Mack Gordon and Harry Revel
Dance performed by Fred Astaire
Recensione in evidenza
Following an apparently accidental teaming in 1933's Flying Down to Rio (a fun Dolores Del Rio vehicle), Fred and Ginger got their first starring feature a year later. It was based on J. Hartley Manners' play 'The Gay Divorce'. The Hays Office insisted on shoving an 'e' on the end, for how could a divorce be so trifling as to be gay? Some UK prints still run with the original title. RKO assembled a sparkling ensemble cast of top-flight farceurs, bringing together (in ascending order of sublimity) Eric Blore, Edward Everett Horton and Erik Rhodes ("Are you a union man?"). Mark Sandrich directs the thing with a maximum of fuss and style. Hermes Pan helped Fred choreograph the numbers.
The plot is suitably - and delightfully - trivial. Musical star Guy Holden (Fred) happens upon a girl (Ginger), falls desperately in love with her, then spends the rest of the picture trying to free himself from marvellously silly plot threads and Everett Horton's exquisite quadruple-takes.
Keeping just one song from Cole Porter's original score, the timeless 'Night and Day', and adding only four others, The Gay Divorcée is more a comedy with songs than it is a musical comedy. But what comedy - and what songs! 'Looking For a Needle in a Haystack' is a masterpiece of economy: Fred a whirlwind of frustrated, lovestruck energy as he spins around his hotel room lamenting his missing love in peerless style. "Men don't pine," he memorably concludes, "Women pine. Men ... suffer." Everett Horton's rare excursion into song-and-dance territory is a breath of hysterical, liberating ludicrousness, as he knocks knees with a young Betty Grable. 'Don't Let It Bother You', performed by a chorus of dancing girls (and dolls), then spectacularly reprised by a tapping Astaire, is another treat. 'The Continental', the film's vast production number is peculiarly edited but sporadically fine and offers a fitting climax.
It's exceptional fluff, the sort of heady, heightened escapism that you don't come close to very often. An extravagantly mounted, joyous comedy played to perfection by two stars at their irresistible peak. Unmissable.
The plot is suitably - and delightfully - trivial. Musical star Guy Holden (Fred) happens upon a girl (Ginger), falls desperately in love with her, then spends the rest of the picture trying to free himself from marvellously silly plot threads and Everett Horton's exquisite quadruple-takes.
Keeping just one song from Cole Porter's original score, the timeless 'Night and Day', and adding only four others, The Gay Divorcée is more a comedy with songs than it is a musical comedy. But what comedy - and what songs! 'Looking For a Needle in a Haystack' is a masterpiece of economy: Fred a whirlwind of frustrated, lovestruck energy as he spins around his hotel room lamenting his missing love in peerless style. "Men don't pine," he memorably concludes, "Women pine. Men ... suffer." Everett Horton's rare excursion into song-and-dance territory is a breath of hysterical, liberating ludicrousness, as he knocks knees with a young Betty Grable. 'Don't Let It Bother You', performed by a chorus of dancing girls (and dolls), then spectacularly reprised by a tapping Astaire, is another treat. 'The Continental', the film's vast production number is peculiarly edited but sporadically fine and offers a fitting climax.
It's exceptional fluff, the sort of heady, heightened escapism that you don't come close to very often. An extravagantly mounted, joyous comedy played to perfection by two stars at their irresistible peak. Unmissable.
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- How long is The Gay Divorcee?Powered by Alexa
Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 520.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 6.879 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 47 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Cerco il mio amore (1934) officially released in India in English?
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