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IMDbPro

Week-End in Havana

  • 1941
  • Approved
  • 1h 21m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
778
YOUR RATING
Carmen Miranda, Cesar Romero, Alice Faye, John Payne, and Cobina Wright in Week-End in Havana (1941)
ComedyMusicalRomance

Nan Spencer is on a boat bound for Havana which runs aground. The man sent to rescue her is engaged and she doesn't understand his disinterest. Monte Blanca is interested, to the annoyance o... Read allNan Spencer is on a boat bound for Havana which runs aground. The man sent to rescue her is engaged and she doesn't understand his disinterest. Monte Blanca is interested, to the annoyance of his girlfriend.Nan Spencer is on a boat bound for Havana which runs aground. The man sent to rescue her is engaged and she doesn't understand his disinterest. Monte Blanca is interested, to the annoyance of his girlfriend.

  • Director
    • Walter Lang
  • Writers
    • Karl Tunberg
    • Darrell Ware
  • Stars
    • Alice Faye
    • Carmen Miranda
    • John Payne
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    778
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Walter Lang
    • Writers
      • Karl Tunberg
      • Darrell Ware
    • Stars
      • Alice Faye
      • Carmen Miranda
      • John Payne
    • 23User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos80

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    Top cast78

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    Alice Faye
    Alice Faye
    • Nan Spencer
    Carmen Miranda
    Carmen Miranda
    • Rosita Rivas
    John Payne
    John Payne
    • Jay Williams
    Cesar Romero
    Cesar Romero
    • Monte Blanca
    Cobina Wright
    Cobina Wright
    • Terry McCracken
    • (as Cobina Wright Jr.)
    George Barbier
    George Barbier
    • Walter McCracken
    Sheldon Leonard
    Sheldon Leonard
    • Boris
    Leonid Kinskey
    Leonid Kinskey
    • Rafael
    Chris-Pin Martin
    Chris-Pin Martin
    • Driver
    Billy Gilbert
    Billy Gilbert
    • Arbolado
    Hal K. Dawson
    • Mr. Marks
    William B. Davidson
    William B. Davidson
    • Captain Moss
    • (as William Davidson)
    Maurice Cass
    Maurice Cass
    • Tailor
    Leona Roberts
    Leona Roberts
    • Passenger
    Harry Hayden
    • Passenger
    Bill Alcorn
    • Dancer
    • (uncredited)
    Louise Allen
    • Dancer
    • (uncredited)
    Russell Ash
    • Dancer
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Walter Lang
    • Writers
      • Karl Tunberg
      • Darrell Ware
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    6.5778
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    Featured reviews

    7blanche-2

    fun Fox Technicolor musical

    Alice Faye knows more than she should about a cruise ship accident and gets herself a big vacation courtesy of the ship line in "Weekend in Havana," costarring John Payne, Carmen Miranda, and Cesar Romero. Alice plays a demanding young woman who insists on recompense for a long-planned vacation when handsome John Payne tries to convince her to sign a waiver. Payne escorts her to Havana where, anxious to get home for his wedding, he proves a dull escort. Faye soon hooks up with Romero, who thinks she's wealthy. He's on the lam from a casino proprietor to whom he owes money. Carmen Miranda, his girlfriend, is the jealous entertainer.

    Everyone in the film is delightful. Having just seen Romero in "Captain from Castile," he is even more impressive in this light role. Miranda is always fun to watch. Faye is very pretty and sings well in her lush contralto. John Payne is easy on the eyes and makes an able leading man. Cobina Wright, as Payne's fiancée, is quite stunning.

    I admit to liking Springtime in the Rockies and The Gang's All Here more, but "Weekend in Havana" makes for fun viewing.
    8jzeltzer-dc

    Thoroughly enjoyable escapist pre-World War II fare

    I really enjoyed this musical. Carmen Miranda and Ceasr Romero are especially charming and at the top of their game. The songs and dancing routines are first class, a little "Hermes Pan" influence. I am also a fan of John Payne. His understated and often over looked skills as an actor are on display as be brings a light touch to this enjoyable romp. I thought Alice Faye was wonderful but would like to have seen her do a couple of more musical numbers like she has done in her other projects. No one can introduce a song during the era of the 30s and 40s like Alice. The colors are big, bright and beautiful and makes for a wonderful watch. I may be old fashioned but this is a film i could watch with the grand children and laugh out loud with them.
    6Doylenf

    Was Havana really like this?...routine Fox musical, weak script...

    Fox makes ample use of their stock company players--ALICE FAYE, JOHN PAYNE, CARMEN MIRANDA, CESAR ROMERO, as well as a bevy of dependable supporting actors to make sure that their technicolor investment in WEEKEND IN HAVANA pays off. Unfortunately, it's a routine assignment for all concerned. The script is light, even for a Fox musical.

    Faye had better musicals at the studio and is saddled with playing a rather pushy department store clerk who expects to get the royal treatment in Havana after her cruise is interrupted by a shipwreck. Naturally, a handsome corporate man (Payne) is assigned to take care of her "vacation" in Havana, and therein lies the nub of the plot. Everything that follows is quite predictable, including misunderstood romantic complications, but the end result is nevertheless entertaining.

    Both Alice and Carmen Miranda have opportunities to demonstrate their prowess with a song and John Payne makes an attractive partner for Faye. Cesar Romero plays a Latin charmer with his usual confident air. It's all very pretty in Fox's typically garish technicolor but fails to stay in the memory as some of Faye's other films do since there's nothing especially memorable about either the plot or the music.
    7bkoganbing

    That Tropical Magic

    Although none of the principal players set foot in Havana, Cuba for the production of Weekend in Havana, Darryl F. Zanuck sent a second unit crew down there to get enough background shots and longshots with doubles of the players to make one feel they were having a Weekend in Havana. Usually the studios just relied on newsreel footage so 20th Century Fox was spending more than most studios would at this time.

    There are certain plot similarities to Paramount's Waikiki Wedding that starred Bing Crosby and Shirley Ross four years earlier. In fact George Barbier has the same kind of part in both, a business executive who wants to make sure a young woman has the time of her life on vacation be it Hawaii or Cuba.

    In this case it's Alice Faye, a shopgirl who saved her money for a cruise and in this case the cruise ship ran aground on a reef on the Cuban coast. She just doesn't want to sign a waiver to get the company off the hook for a lawsuit. So John Payne who is about to become Barbier's son-in-law is sent to get that waiver by hook or crook.

    What he ends up doing is trying to make sure Faye has a good time in Havana under his personal management. He even calls in a broke Cesar Romero in for a bit of romance when Faye doesn't take to him. Payne offers to pay Romero's debts to casino owner Sheldon Leonard and that doesn't sit too well with Carmen Miranda, Romero's girlfriend. And the whole business ain't sitting too well with Cobina Wright who is Payne's fiancé.

    I'm sure you can figure out where this is going plot wise. In addition to those mentioned look for nice performances from Billy Gilbert as a club owner and Leonid Kinskey as an ever helpful bellhop.

    Seeing Payne and Faye sing together once again confirms my thesis in that 20th Century Fox hired him to take the musical leads opposite their stars like Faye, Betty Grable, etc. He shows himself once again to be a singing Tyrone Power. Alice and he make lovely music, but of course the hit of the film is Carmen Miranda. As it was in any film she was in.

    Another Latin American good will film. Interesting how we got our ideas about Latin America from films like these. Nice entertainment, but bad sociopolitics.
    9JohnHowardReid

    Top-flight fun in a Fox Havana

    Despite the super-lovely Alice Faye's top billing, exotic Carmen Miranda manages to steal the show. She not only has the pick of the songs, the liveliest dances and the most colorful costumes, but shares the movie's funniest moments with Cesar Romero. Mind you, Alice is most attractively photographed, does wear some beautiful clothes, and does get to sing the haunting "Tropical Magic", one of Harry Warren's loveliest tunes. (Harry, incidentally, hated the picture. He loved Alice, but was somewhat ambivalent about Carmen Miranda and John Payne with "his limited and rather ordinary singing voice." Harry also complained that Fox treated him badly, forcing him to work night and day for four weeks because Carmen had scheduled the movie between other engagements. "I turned out a lot of music, some of which was dropped from the picture. I fell ill and was hospitalized for three months with pneumonia. When I returned to the studio, I found I'd been taken off salary for the whole time, whereas Mack Gordon had been kept on. Waving my walking stick, I stormed into Zanuck's office but his yes-men wouldn't let me see him. Maybe Zanuck knew nothing about it, but his lieutenants did. They were horrible people." In Fox's defense, it should be pointed out that Mack Gordon did write lyrics for "Romance and Rhumba" during Harry Warren's absence).

    To my surprise, John Payne's role is more of a character part than that of a romantic lead. It's the lively, personable Cesar Romero who not only shares most of the comedy with both Alice and Carmen, has some delightful run-ins with the heavy (Sheldon Leonard), but supplies romance as well.

    The comedy is also helped out by George Barbier as the peppery president and Billy Gilbert as a self-important innkeeper. In the scenes with both these expert comics, Payne plays the fall-guy. And he makes an amusing job of it too.

    Walter Lang has directed with his customary expertise and no-one will feel short-changed by the lavish Miranda dance numbers choreographed by Hermes Pan.

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Julie Andrews in The Sound of Music (1965)
    Musical
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      "The Man with the Lollipop Song" (music by Harry Warren, lyrics by Mack Gordon, sung in Spanish by Natcho Galindo, followed by Alice Faye's version in English, was cut from the film. Briefly heard is John Payne singing the tune.
    • Quotes

      Jay Williams: You Cubans are supposed to be experts at romance.

    • Connections
      Featured in Americas in Transition (1982)
    • Soundtracks
      A Week-End in Havana
      (uncredited)

      Music by Harry Warren

      Lyrics by Mack Gordon

      Sung by Carmen Miranda in the opening number with chorus and band

      Reprised by an offscreen chorus during the montage in Havana

      Played as background music often

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 17, 1941 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Carribean Cruise
    • Filming locations
      • Cuba
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 21m(81 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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