A Broadway producer satirizes an important New York family. The family sues but their daughter falls in love with the producer.A Broadway producer satirizes an important New York family. The family sues but their daughter falls in love with the producer.A Broadway producer satirizes an important New York family. The family sues but their daughter falls in love with the producer.
- Awards
- 1 win total
The Ritz Brothers
- The Ritz Brothers
- (as Ritz Brothers)
Harry Ritz
- Harry
- (as Ritz Brothers)
Jimmy Ritz
- Jimmy
- (as Ritz Brothers)
Sig Ruman
- Herr Hanfstangel
- (as Sig Rumann)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaRemade as "Let's Make Love" (1960) but with the genders of the leads reversed: Marilyn Monroe played Dick Powell's role and Yves Montand played Madeleine Carroll's.
- GoofsIn his third and final scene, actor Stepin Fetchit tells Dick Powell that Mimi is on the phone. His character name is Herman, but Powell says "Thanks, Step."
- Quotes
Commodore Caraway: Do you realize that our family honor has been outraged?
Aunt Fritz: Popcorn and peanuts!
- ConnectionsFeatured in Take It or Leave It (1944)
- SoundtracksHe Ain't Got Rhythm
(1937) (uncredited)
Music and Lyrics by Irving Berlin
Performed by Alice Faye, The Ritz Brothers and chorus in the show
Featured review
Silly backstage story with a beautiful but uninteresting leading lady in Madeleine Carroll, this 20th Century Fox musical is buoyed by a couple of happy factors: third-billed Alice Faye, in the last of her kewpie-doll roles (after this she was always a noble leading lady, and arguably less interesting), and an excellent Irving Berlin score. Berlin had his pulse on pop music of the times like nobody else, and he delivers sumptuous ballads, rhythm numbers, and social satire from a seemingly bottomless bag of inspiration. Dick Powell, stuck with playing the sort of insipid roles he hated at Warners, doesn't seem that happy, and Cora Witherspoon, as Carroll's dotty aunt, dithers in a part that almost certainly was designed for Alice Brady. But Faye's "This Year's Kisses" and "Slumming on Park Avenue" are fabulous, and the Ritz Brothers, while nobody's favorite comedy team, are well used. It's fast and unpretentious, and rest assured, another good Berlin tune is always coming up.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 29 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content