A young hoofer quits vaudeville to become a composer and hooks up with a Russian ballet troupe.A young hoofer quits vaudeville to become a composer and hooks up with a Russian ballet troupe.A young hoofer quits vaudeville to become a composer and hooks up with a Russian ballet troupe.
Sarita Wooton
- Vera as a Girl
- (as Sarita Wooten)
Irving Bacon
- Second Stage Manager
- (uncredited)
Leon Belasco
- Mishka - Slave in Ballet
- (uncredited)
Symona Boniface
- Woman in Audience
- (uncredited)
Wade Boteler
- Second Policeman
- (uncredited)
Glen Cavender
- Extra as Stagehand
- (uncredited)
Lew Christensen
- Ballet Dancer
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- Trivia"On Your Toes" was adapted from a Broadway musical that opened at the Imperial Theater in New York on April 11, 1936 and ran for 315 performances. Ray Bolger starred in the original stage production. The musical was revived on Broadway in 1954 and 1983.
- GoofsGeorge Balanchine's name is misspelled as "Ballanchine" in the credits.
- Quotes
Sergei Alexandrovitch: I will not give the American audiences what they want, I will give them what they ought to like.
- Crazy creditsLorenz Hart, the lyricist for the original Broadway show, receives onscreen credit, but his lyrics are never sung at all in the film.
- ConnectionsFeatured in That's Dancing! (1985)
- SoundtracksOh, You Beautiful Doll
(1911) (uncredited)
Music by Nat Ayer
Second number performed by the Dancing Dolans, repeated during the vaudeville bits
Danced by Donald O'Connor, Queenie Smith and James Gleason
Featured review
Vera Zorina, Eddie Albert, Alan Hale, Jr., Frank McHugh, Leonid Kinskey, Donald O'Connor, and James Gleason star in "On Your Toes," a 1939 film based on the Broadway show of the same name, which starred Ray Bolger and had music and lyrics by Rogers and Hart. If you think you hear "There's a Small Hotel" in the background throughout this film, you are - it was one of the songs in the musical that is not performed here. Since the star is Vera Zorina, the song omissions are presumably because she wasn't a singer. You'd think Hollywood just never dubbed anyone or just never assigned a song to a different character.
At any rate, if you forget the original show, what's left is actually entertaining, with Albert playing Phil Dolan, Jr., a young hoofer turned composer who writes "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue." The two dance sections, "Princess Zenobia" and "Slaughter" are the highlights of the film, with Slaughter very importantly shown with the original Balanchine choreography.
The other highlight for me was seeing a young Donald O'Connor, who plays the Phil as a young boy in vaudeville - he's delightful.
Some trivia: the head of the ballet company, played here by Alan Hale, Jr., was played on Broadway by Monty Wooley.
At any rate, if you forget the original show, what's left is actually entertaining, with Albert playing Phil Dolan, Jr., a young hoofer turned composer who writes "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue." The two dance sections, "Princess Zenobia" and "Slaughter" are the highlights of the film, with Slaughter very importantly shown with the original Balanchine choreography.
The other highlight for me was seeing a young Donald O'Connor, who plays the Phil as a young boy in vaudeville - he's delightful.
Some trivia: the head of the ballet company, played here by Alan Hale, Jr., was played on Broadway by Monty Wooley.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 34 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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