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Gentlemen Marry Brunettes

  • 1955
  • Approved
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
5.1/10
720
YOUR RATING
Jane Russell and Jeanne Crain in Gentlemen Marry Brunettes (1955)
Two Broadway showgirls, who are also sisters, are sick and tired of New York, as well as getting nowhere. Quitting Broadway, the sisters decided to travel to Paris to become famous.
Play trailer2:24
1 Video
18 Photos
ComedyMusicalRomance

Two Broadway showgirls who are also sisters are sick and tired of New York, and sick and tired of getting nowhere. They decide to quit Broadway and travel to Paris to try their luck and tale... Read allTwo Broadway showgirls who are also sisters are sick and tired of New York, and sick and tired of getting nowhere. They decide to quit Broadway and travel to Paris to try their luck and talent there.Two Broadway showgirls who are also sisters are sick and tired of New York, and sick and tired of getting nowhere. They decide to quit Broadway and travel to Paris to try their luck and talent there.

  • Director
    • Richard Sale
  • Writers
    • Anita Loos
    • Mary Loos
    • Richard Sale
  • Stars
    • Jane Russell
    • Jeanne Crain
    • Alan Young
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.1/10
    720
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Sale
    • Writers
      • Anita Loos
      • Mary Loos
      • Richard Sale
    • Stars
      • Jane Russell
      • Jeanne Crain
      • Alan Young
    • 22User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:24
    Official Trailer

    Photos18

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    Top Cast24

    Edit
    Jane Russell
    Jane Russell
    • Bonnie Jones…
    Jeanne Crain
    Jeanne Crain
    • Connie Jones…
    Alan Young
    Alan Young
    • Charlie Biddle…
    Scott Brady
    Scott Brady
    • David Action
    Rudy Vallee
    Rudy Vallee
    • Rudy Vallee
    Guy Middleton
    Guy Middleton
    • Earl of Wickenware
    Eric Pohlmann
    Eric Pohlmann
    • M. Ballard
    Robert Favart
    • Hotel Manager
    Guido Lorraine
    • M. Marcel
    Ferdy Mayne
    Ferdy Mayne
    • M. Dufond
    Boyd Cabeen
    • Pilot
    Howard Tracy
    • Chauffeur
    • (as Edward Tracy)
    Leonard Sachs
    Leonard Sachs
    • M. Dufy
    Gini Young
    • Blonde
    Carmen Cabeen
    • Blonde
    • (as Carmen Nesbitt)
    Duncan Elliott
    • Couturier
    Michael Balfour
    Michael Balfour
    • Stage Doorman
    Derek Sydney
    Derek Sydney
    • Stage Manager
    • Director
      • Richard Sale
    • Writers
      • Anita Loos
      • Mary Loos
      • Richard Sale
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    5.1720
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    Featured reviews

    miketv-1

    I'm starting to like it.

    This movie is growing on me, I didn't like it the first time but, it has some great parts. If you are looking for another Gentlemen Prefer Blondes it is not as good as that movie but it does have some fun numbers like "Have You Met Miss Jones" Some great scenery, and Jane is funny in this. It does have some parts that are goofy and the "I've Got Five Dollars" sounds like it was made up on the spot, just singing about any trivial thing. The "AINT MISBEHAVING" is the topper with a jungle tribe ready to feast on the girls and Alan Young in that gorilla suit doing the Marlene Dietrich Hot Voodoo bit. this may take more than one viewing to be appreciated.
    5impsrule

    It Coulda' Been a Contenda'

    Okay, first let me come clean with my biases: I'm a Jane Russell fan. Even recognizing how amazing Marilyn Monroe was, etc, etc... Even in 'Gentlemen Prefer Blondes', I've personally always preferred Jane Russell's 'wise-cracking dame' screen persona to Marilyn's blowsy bubble-head. But that said...

    While I agree that "Gentlemen Marry Brunettes" is by no means a great film, even if one lowers the bar to generic 50's musical standards. Still, I do think its greatest sin is in not being "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes". It wouldn't seem half so bad if it didn't instantly invite comparison to a classic 'relative' ("Gentlemen Prefer Blondes").

    Yet and still the production values are generally very high. Costumes by Travilla, additional fashions by Dior, and the period location filming in Paris and Monte Carlo alone really is (almost) worth sitting through the movie for.

    As an earlier commentator pointed out, I do think it was a mistake to make Jane play an 'air-head'. One of her strenghts as a performer/film personality is that her basic integrity usually shone through on screen. It's a shame to hide that.

    The biggest mistakes (in my opinion) are that neither Jane, nor Jeanne Crain were given a 'solo-number'. It may seem a small thing, but if one reflects on the shining moments of "Blondes", one's mind immediately goes to Marilyn's "Diamonds Are A Girl's Best Friend" and Jane pushing the muscle men around in "Ain't There Anyone Here For Love?". It's in these two scenes where both performer's personalities (Marilyn, the 'sizzling' blonde bombshell; and Jane, the raven-haired, self-effacing flirt) really shine. No such scenes exist in "Brunettes" for either character.

    Further, while I like Jeanne Crain as a performer, I can't help feeling that the story needed another kind of 'contrast' to replace that dynamism between blonde Marilyn and brunette Jane in "Blondes". Playing the 'what if' game for a moment: imagine (with a slight plot shift)a young RITA MORENO as Jane Russell's Cuban 'half-sister' or 'cousin'? Just a little 'twist' like that would have added an element of thematic and visual tension that is missing in "Brunettes". OR... since the film was set in Europe, how about Gina Lolobrigida as Jane's Italian cousin, giving the movie added continental flair? Still... I say take "Brunettes" for what it is: a handsomely-mounted relic of Hollywood's last fling with pure, unadulterated fluff musicals! Put cotton in your ears and soak in the costumes and location shooting!
    pagan5

    Relax and enjoy!

    Give this movie a break! It's a spoof of the 50's musicals that were practically unspoofable in the first place. Enormously over-the- top it's nonetheless a great deal of fun; loud, brashy, colorful and vulgar. Travilla's costumes should give you a clue that it wasn't to be taken seriously. Monroe's principal costumer, he purposely spoofed himself with this picture. Relax and enjoy. Enjoy Paris in 1955 and delectable Jane and Jeanne in their final days as major movie stars.

    Jane would disappear after 57's Fuzzy Pink Nightgown while Jeanne wasn't far behind in The Joker Is Wild. After that is was A.C. Lyles westerns and TV.
    5bkoganbing

    The toasts of Paris

    As the brunettes that gentlemen prefer to marry Jane Russell and Jeanne Crain at least got a working vacation in Paris. The cinematography of the city of lights is dazzling..

    A rather thin plot with many flashback sequences and one dream sequence are packed into Gentlemen Marry Brunettes. Jane and Jeanne play themselves a pair of sister showgirls who are tired of the New York scene and go to Paris hoping to strike it big as their motherand aunt did back in the Roaring 20s.

    One remnant of the 20s is in Paris. Rudy Vallee is there and he remembers the old sister act well. With his patronage and a rich secret admirer the new sister act hits it big.

    They even pick up a couple of earnest courters, Scott Brady and Alan Young. t all ain't quite enough.

    A bit more of a coherent story and Gentlemen Marry Brunettes would have been a classic.
    darkinvader45210

    The Worst Musical of All Time, but the Most Entertaining

    Have you ever seen such an awful movie that despite how bad it is it's still very entertaining? Well, welcome to the world of Anita Loo's and find out why Gentlemen may Prefer Blondes, but they don't neccessarily Marry Brunettes.

    Here we have Jane Russell giving a very bad imitation of Marilyn Monroe with Jeanne Crain doing a very bad imitation of Jane Russell whose singing is dubbed by Anita Ellis who had dubbed Vera Ellen in the movie "Three Little Words". Then we've got Rudy Vallee who looks like he's a zombie on his last leg, ready for the grave, but still trying to sing "Have You Met Miss Jones" and a very bad, but hilarious rendition of, "I Wanna Be Loved By You" with Jane and Jeanne impersonating brainless idiot chorus girls, singing in high-pitched brainless notes through their noses, and on the soundtrack album it states that the singing for this particular number is sung by Miss Crain herself, and if I had been Miss Crain I, in no way, would have admitted to it by allowing that to appear on the album, but she's justified by a wonderful rendition, even though dubbed by Anita Ellis, of "My Funny Valentine"! Then you've got "You're Driving Me Crazy" which is fun, especially when the girls are expected to lift their fans at the end of the number saying, "I Couldn't Care Less!", and appear nude in front of the audiance, and Alan Young is booing them with the rest of the audiance, and Jane Russell later defends their actions by saying that they thought the French had a sense of humor!

    Then you've got Scott Brady who didn't do his own singing [Robert Farnon the director of the orchestra did the dubbing for Brady], but Alan Young did do his own singing, but I really have to admit that even though the final number in the film has to be the worse musical number ever filmed for a movie, I really enjoyed it! Well, it WAS different! Here's Jane and Jeanne dressed up like birds of paradise standing in a pot ready to be cooked for dinner by the restless hungry natives in Africa and Alan Young is up in a tree dressed up like an Ape, and he, the girls, and the natives are all singing Ain't Misbehaving which makes about as much sense as an adajio dancer trying to dance on a hot rock, but pulling this whole ridiculous number together with the singing which isn't really that bad even though the natives sound like their singing Tarzan's favorite line OOM-GOW-WHAH during the chorus - dumb as it was - I LIKED IT, especially when Jane Russell does her sultry sexy rendition of Ain't Misbehaving like only she can do with the natives in the background still sounding like their singing OOM-GOW-WHAH!

    But, the ending is priceless with Scott Brady starting out saying:

    SCOTT: Bonnie! Will you marry me? JANE: [Imitating Marilyn Monroe] No! SCOTT: Bonnie! Do you really mean that? JANE: [Imitating Jane Russell] No!

    Then she breaks into song singing some of "I Got Five Dollars" and when she gets to "Everything" Scott Brady asks, "Everything?" and she answers "Everything" and while they kiss, Jane Russell appears aboard as her older gray haired, wrinkled up, Aunt or Mother or whoever she is, and she sees what's happening, and she says, in her crackly old-age voice, to the Captain of the ship:

    WHERE'S THE BAR!

    And that's exactly how you feel when the movie is ending:

    WHERE'S THE BAR!

    Make mine a double vodka on the rocks with a twist of lemon, thank you very much so that I can justify, with what's left of my mind after viewing this two-hour fiasco, why I found this very bad, awful, musical so entertaining!

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
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    Musical
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    Romance

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Fox studio head Darryl F. Zanuck had originally assumed the need to dub the singing voices of Jane Russell and Marilyn Monroe in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) until musical director Lionel Newman famously stitched together a vocal rendition of their opening number from multiple takes. As a back-up plan, an alternate set of recordings was made with Eileen Wilson dubbing Russell's voice, but in the end both ladies sang for themselves, and Russell even released an album of songs on the MGM label. From that point on, Jane Russell always sang in her own movies, including Gentlemen Marry Brunettes (1955), and she would go on to a very successful run on Broadway as Elaine Stritch's replacement in the show "Company" in 1971.
    • Quotes

      Connie Jones: Bad dreams? I'm having nightmares in CinemaScope!

    • Connections
      Featured in Legends of World Cinema: Jane Russell
    • Soundtracks
      Gentlemen Marry Brunettes
      Music by Herbert W. Spencer and Earle Hagen

      Lyrics by Richard Sale

      Performed by Johnny Desmond

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 27, 1956 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Escándalos en París
    • Filming locations
      • Monte Carlo, Monaco
    • Production company
      • Russ-Field Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 39m(99 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.55 : 1

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