Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaFour sailors enter a Singapore dive, meet a Chinese girl from Brooklyn, and find there's more to her than meets the eye. Two songs.Four sailors enter a Singapore dive, meet a Chinese girl from Brooklyn, and find there's more to her than meets the eye. Two songs.Four sailors enter a Singapore dive, meet a Chinese girl from Brooklyn, and find there's more to her than meets the eye. Two songs.
Cary Grant
- First Sailor
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Millard Mitchell
- Second Sailor
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
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Recensioni in evidenza
Anna Chang was not Anna May Wong
Sven was completely off-base in his comment, as far as I can tell from some quick Internet research. Anna May Wong was a star of silent movies in the 1920s and it seems unlikely that she would have taken a role in a Paramount short in 1932, especially one where she portrayed a singer in a dive. "Anna May Wong: From Laundryman's Daughter to Hollywood Legend" by Graham Russell Gao Hodges would confirm this but even if you rely on the Wikipedia entry on her, "She spent the first half of the 1930s traveling between the U.S. and Europe for film and stage appearances." A look at her picture shows no resemblance to Anna Chang. According to a review on another site, Chang and Joe Wong, her co-star, were "popular Chinese vaudeville stars." That seems more plausible to me than assuming that Anna May Wong appeared in "Singapore Sue" under a pseudonym.
Not a great motion picture...
Singapore Sue, not a great motion picture, but entertaining at times. Cary Grant makes his screen debut costarring next to the beloved Anna Chang in this clever comedy short about an American sailor boy who falls deeply in love with a Chinese dancing girl, Sue. The young Grant's face is barely recognizable behind that thick coating of makeup they had plastered all over it. But really folks, Casey Robinson is such an excellent director, it's surprising we don't see more of his work today. If I had to describe it in words I would only need one: a superb masterpiece. Come see this unforgettable classic feature and hear Singapore sing. I give it five stars, that's five out of ten. The rest is not worth commenting on.
A very different Cary
Found my VCR had caught this when left on all night after capturing "The Black Swan". Cary Grant plays a "grins too much" sailor in a Singapore nightclub with three other sailors. No real plot, just a bunch of locals singing and Cary constantly scheming on the girl singer. Noticed one of the sailors was Millard Mitchell who played Jimmy Stewarts sidekick in Winchester '73 and Gregory Peck's boss in 12 O'clock High.
VERY Early Cary Grant -- Not Vital but Interesting
This short could be used as a viable argument for political correctness. The ONLY reason to see it is simply to see Cary Grant in a very early appearance. As the other reviewers have mentioned, miss Chang doesn't sing very well; while she is pleasant to look at, you need to get past the horrible dialog, most of which is given to Millard Mitchell and revolves around badmouthing the Chinese owners of the bar and insulting Chinese people in general. Joe Wong, it turns out, was actually a Filipino named Jose Ocampo Cobarrubias. I guess the show name fits better on the marquee. If you get a chance to see it, do so, but don't kill yourself trying to find this.
Cary Grant's First On-Screen Appearance
Novelist John Saunders was heavily involved in Hollywood, whose written works provided the framework for 1927 "Wings," 1928 "The Docks of New York," and 1930 "The Dawn Patrol." From his book "The Last Flight," which was made into a 1931 film with Richard Barthelmess, Saunders developed the play 'Nikki,' which his wife, actress Fay Wray, served as the lead on the 1931 Broadway stage. Included in the cast was a young actor, Archibald Leach, playing the Cary Lockwood character. Leach received rave reviews from the play's 39 performances. Columnist Ed Sullivan predicted the "young lad from England has a big future in the movies." Paramount Pictures noticed the stage actor, ran a screen test and filmed him as a sailor in his first screen appearance, in June 1932's musical short, "Singapore Sue." Paramount signed the 27-year-old Leach to a five-year contract, but with the caveat he had to change his name. The studio suggested his new name should sound something like its main star, Gary Cooper. Leach loved the character's name he played in 'Nikki,' and told the studio his first preference was Cary Lockwood. The execs liked the first name, but since there was an obscure actor already with that name, they gave him a list to choose for his last name. Knowing Clark Gable's career was becoming quite successful, Archibald, for good luck, chose the C. G. abbreviations, and selected Grant on the last name listing. Thus, Archibald Leach became known as Cary Grant.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizFilmed in 1931 at Paramount's Astoria studios. Cary Grant was then appearing in the Broadway play 'Nikki' under his real name Archie Leach.
- Citazioni
First Sailor: Say, I've got 10 bucks here that says I can get that flower she's wearing in 10 minutes.
- ConnessioniEdited from The Letter (1929)
- Colonne sonoreHow Can a Girl Say No?
Sung by Anna Chang
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Singapurska Sue
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Kaufman Astoria Studios - 3412 36th Street, Astoria, Queens, New York, New York, Stati Uniti(Paramount Astoria Studios site)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 10min
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.33 : 1
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