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You'll Never Get Rich

  • 1941
  • Approved
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
3.2K
YOUR RATING
Fred Astaire and Rita Hayworth in You'll Never Get Rich (1941)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:07
1 Video
99+ Photos
ComedyRomance

In order to cover up his philandering ways, a married Broadway producer sets one of his dancers up on a date with a chorus girl for whom he had bought a gift, but the two dancers fall in lov... Read allIn order to cover up his philandering ways, a married Broadway producer sets one of his dancers up on a date with a chorus girl for whom he had bought a gift, but the two dancers fall in love for real.In order to cover up his philandering ways, a married Broadway producer sets one of his dancers up on a date with a chorus girl for whom he had bought a gift, but the two dancers fall in love for real.

  • Director
    • Sidney Lanfield
  • Writers
    • Michael Fessier
    • Ernest Pagano
  • Stars
    • Fred Astaire
    • Rita Hayworth
    • Robert Benchley
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    3.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sidney Lanfield
    • Writers
      • Michael Fessier
      • Ernest Pagano
    • Stars
      • Fred Astaire
      • Rita Hayworth
      • Robert Benchley
    • 32User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Oscars
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    You'll Never Get Rich
    Trailer 2:07
    You'll Never Get Rich

    Photos109

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    + 103
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    Top cast74

    Edit
    Fred Astaire
    Fred Astaire
    • Robert Curtis
    Rita Hayworth
    Rita Hayworth
    • Sheila Winthrop
    Robert Benchley
    Robert Benchley
    • Martin Cortland
    John Hubbard
    John Hubbard
    • Tom Barton
    Osa Massen
    Osa Massen
    • Sonya
    Frieda Inescort
    Frieda Inescort
    • Mrs. Julia Cortland
    Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams
    Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams
    • Kewpie Blain
    • (as Guinn Williams)
    Donald MacBride
    Donald MacBride
    • Top Sergeant
    Cliff Nazarro
    Cliff Nazarro
    • Swivel Tongue
    Marjorie Gateson
    Marjorie Gateson
    • Aunt Louise
    Ann Shoemaker
    Ann Shoemaker
    • Mrs. Barton
    Boyd Davis
    • Colonel Shiller
    Ed Allen
    • Grand Central Station Worker
    • (uncredited)
    Sam Ash
    Sam Ash
    • Nightclub Headwaiter
    • (uncredited)
    Bonnie Bronson
    • Chorus Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Lucius Brooks
    • Guard House Singer - One of The Four Tones
    • (uncredited)
    Stanley Brown
    Stanley Brown
    • Private
    • (uncredited)
    Leon Buck
    • Guard House Singer - One of The Four Tones
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Sidney Lanfield
    • Writers
      • Michael Fessier
      • Ernest Pagano
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews32

    6.73.1K
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    Featured reviews

    jauny2000

    Rita Hayworth is breathtaking in this film

    I think this film is a delightful comedy, with all players playing their respected roles beautifully. I especially love the dance steps and musical number done by Astaire and Hayworth during rehearsal at the beginning of the movie.
    9cobrazulu

    Hayworth-Astaire are a perfect match.

    I have to differ with the viewer who feels that though Rita Hayworth was a marvelous dancer she did not measure up to Ginger Rogers as the partner of Fred Astaire. Rita's dancing was so graceful that she was the perfect match for the stupendous Astaire. Her beauty in this movie is a thing to behold. Now after all these years we can only wish that they included a bunch of other dances instead of all the silliness. How can it be that such a lovely as Rita would have such a difficult life? I wonder if the talented Hayworth ever realized that it would be her early dancing that would really be her lasting legacy and if she did would she have given us more to appreciate for the years. Watching her dance as a young woman is a joy that will be repeated for generations.
    dougdoepke

    Aces All Around

    Dance arranger escapes to the army after his daffy boss can't seem to keep his women properly sorted.

    Expert mix of comedy, dance, and glamour. The glamour's supplied by Hayworth who's—in a word—simply dazzling (okay, two words). Her appearance in Gilda (1946) may have supplied the smoldering sex appeal, but this one supplies the sheer beauty. Plus she cuts a pretty good rug with the incomparable Astaire who turns in his usual nimble footed magic. Of course, putting the rail-thin danceman in the army is a stretch, but the script doctors manage to turn his weight trick into a chuckle.

    Then there's the terminally befuddled Robert Benchley (Mr. Cortland) who can't seem to tell a backscratcher from a bracelet or his wife from a chorus girl. Pairing his nonsense with the classy, no-nonsense Inescort (Mrs. Cortland) is a comedic masterstroke. I love his I'm-caught-again stammer as he withers under her glare. Then too, the chorus girls send-off for the soldier boys in the train station is a real eye-catcher and masterpiece of staging. It may not be the dance centerpiece, but it does brim over with genial high spirits.

    If I didn't know better (release date, Sept. 1941), I would have guessed this was a WWII morale booster. But clearly the big one is on the horizon, and I'll bet this 90-minutes of escape played in a ton of overseas bases. After all, what GI would not fight to keep the Hayworths back home safe and secure. But happily you don't need to be a GI or his girl to enjoy this expert blend of dance and whimsy, courtesy a stellar cast, a clever script, and Columbia studios.
    7EUyeshima

    Astaire and a Dazzling Hayworth Amid Boogie-Woogie Beats and Wartime Shenanigans

    Barely five minutes into the film and only thirty seconds long, a small jewel is not to be missed in this vintage 1941 musical, as it ranks among the best dance numbers to be seen from the golden age of Hollywood. It's where Fred Astaire casually asks Rita Hayworth to follow him on a complex tap routine set to Cole Porter's "Boogie Barcarole". That Astaire performs flawlessly is to be expected, but the stunning 23-year old Hayworth is startling in her precision and élan. Not only is she absurdly beautiful in her crisp rehearsal togs, but she matches Astaire step for step with unbridled confidence and with her long, gorgeous gams perfectly synchronized with his. The rest of the number, performed with an army of similarly dressed dancers, is not nearly as interesting especially since the fusion between boogie-woogie and classical feels forced.

    The movie itself, directed by Sidney Lanfield and written by Michael Fessier and Ernest Pagano, is a silly mistaken identity affair that feels lifted from one of Astaire's earlier pairings with Ginger Rogers and then retrofitted into a military theme. Hardly a stretch, he plays Bob Curtis, a Broadway dancer and choreographer who works for philandering producer Martin Cortland, played by Algonquin wit Robert Benchley. Cortland has his eyes on chorus dancer Sheila Winthrop and attempts to give her a diamond bracelet until his wife Julia mistakes the gift for her. He pretends the bracelet is from Curtis, which of course, leads to larger complications, especially when Curtis gets drafted and his superior officer turns out to be Sheila's intended fiancé. Off the dance floor and in her first leading role, Hayworth, already in her 38th film, is charming as Sheila, although Frieda Inescort easily steals all her scenes as the deadpan Julia, a perfect match to the acerbic Benchley.

    Lowbrow comic shenanigans are interspersed with the Robert Alton-choreographed musical numbers. The highlights are an impressive Astaire tap solo set to "Since I Kissed My Baby Goodbye" and two more duets with Hayworth - the alluring rumba, "So Near and Yet So Far", and the infectious "Wedding Cake Walk" where the pair get married amid a dress-alike chorus, do a mean Harlem shuffle and tap-dance atop a white cake shaped like a tank. In fact, opening two months before Pearl Harbor, the film portends the upcoming war with patriotic ensemble numbers like "Shootin' the Works for Uncle Sam". The 2003 DVD includes trailers for this film as well as two classic Hayworth vehicles, the career-defining Gilda, and future husband Orson Welles' pulp classic, The Lady from Shanghai. The movie is very lightweight, but Astaire's artistry is always worthwhile in any setting, and it's easy to see why Hayworth became the fantasy figure of many an American soldier.
    8Nazi_Fighter_David

    Hayworth seems a bit too "grand" for Astaire's self-effacing style...

    Released shortly before America's entry into the war, Columbia's "You'll Never Get Rich" is one of Fred Astaire's better films during the relatively dry period that extended from his last RKO film with Ginger Rogers to his first films at MGM…

    Since leaving RKO and Ginger Rogers, Astaire had danced with Eleanor Powell in "Broadway Melody of 1940" and with Paulette Goddard in "Second Chorus."

    In "You'll Never Get Rich," he had a new partner in Rita Hayworth: a lushly beautiful redheaded actress who was being prepared for stardom in mostly low-budget films… She was a talented dancer who had worked with her family for many years in a vaudeville act called the Dancing Casinos…

    "You'll Never Get Rich" cast Astaire as Robert Curtis, a Broadway dance director who is drafted into the army… He becomes involved in an on-again, off-again romance with Sheila Winthrop (Hayworth), a beautiful chorus girl whose fiancé is a captain in the army… The not-very-interesting plot is often interrupted for musical interludes… Astaire and Hayworth dance together twice—to the sensuous Latin beat of "So Near and Yet So Far," and in "The Wedding Cake Walk," a military finale which has a chorus of war brides and soldiers, plus the two stars, dancing atop a huge tank…

    Astaire and Hayworth make an attractive dance team, although Hayworth seems a bit too formidable, too "grand" for Astaire's self-effacing style…. Astaire also has several numbers without Hayworth: most notably, a dance in a guardhouse to the song "Since I Kissed My Baby Goodbye," in which he combines several kinds of dazzling footwork…

    "You'll Never Get Rich" is lightweight but amiable entertainment, and it kept Astaire dancing

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The language that Swivel Tongue (Cliff Nazarro) uses was called "double talk" and was a popular fad during WW2.
    • Goofs
      As Fred Astaire and Robert Benchley are discussing the upcoming show they pass several soldiers who are working with shovels. Though the soldiers are supposed to be breaking up clods and smoothing the dirt the shovels never come within six inches of the ground.
    • Quotes

      Robert Curtis: Confidentially, Sheila, I'm delighted every time you make a mistake. It gives me the chance to dance with you.

      Sheila Winthrop: Confidentially, I make mistakes for the same reason.

    • Crazy credits
      The opening credits are presented as a series of roadside advertising signs observed by one of the characters.
    • Connections
      Featured in Hollywood: The Great Stars (1963)
    • Soundtracks
      Boogie Barcarolle
      (uncredited)

      Written by Cole Porter

      Danced by Fred Astaire, Rita Hayworth and chorus at rehearsal

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 25, 1941 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • He's My Uncle
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 28m(88 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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