A nightclub near an opera singer's home faces closure from her manager. The club owners befriend her, but when she starts liking popular music, more troubles arise as they try to launch a Br... Read allA nightclub near an opera singer's home faces closure from her manager. The club owners befriend her, but when she starts liking popular music, more troubles arise as they try to launch a Broadway show.A nightclub near an opera singer's home faces closure from her manager. The club owners befriend her, but when she starts liking popular music, more troubles arise as they try to launch a Broadway show.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 1 nomination total
S.Z. Sakall
- Ladislaus Cassel
- (as S.Z. 'Cuddles' Sakall)
Nick Condos
- Specialty Dancer
- (as The Condos Brothers)
Steve Condos
- Specialty Dancer
- (as The Condos Brothers)
Mimi Aguglia
- Inez - Victoria's Maid
- (uncredited)
Ramsay Ames
- Bar Patron
- (uncredited)
Lynn Baggett
- Nurse
- (uncredited)
Rose Bascom
- Trick Roper
- (uncredited)
Monte Blue
- Stage Manager
- (uncredited)
5.9390
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Featured reviews
"I don't want the best, I want you!"
A very funny movie. Dennis Morgan and Jack Carson are two guys who want to put on a musical, but they need a backer. Also hindering their plans is an orchestra conductor (S.Z. Sakall) who lives next door and doesn't like their "noise". Morgan simply has the conductor's daughter (Martha Vickers) - who is also an opera singer - fall in love with him. Then everyone gets along fine. Lots of good one-liners - Sakall gets a lot of the laughs. One of my favorite actresses, Janis Paige, also appears, as one of the show's stars (and Carson's girlfriend, if I remember correctly). There's one number that Morgan sings in blackface and there's a big production number with all the dancing girls dressed as cows that has just got to be seen to be believed! The only time I was bored was during the tap dancing - I have trouble watching that. Keep your ears clear for the best line, spoken by Vickers to Morgan - "I don't want the best, I want you!". I could say something similar to this film.
Color, more than Paramount did for Bing and Bob
Warner Brothers did for Dennis Morgan and Jack Carson something that Paramount until the Road To Bali never did for Bing and Bob. The Time, The Place And The Girl was done in some really nice technicolor and they gave the musical numbers by Arthur Schwartz and Leo Robin full production numbers. They could do this because a great deal of the film has a nightclub setting.
A nightclub setting that Morgan and Carson own and are trying to open. But they are next door to S.Z. Sakall and Florence Bates and their townhouse. Sakall is a symphony conductor and their granddaughter Martha Vickers is studying grand opera. Funny we hear no operatic notes from her.
What to do but send the old lady killer Morgan into action. But he really falls for Vickers. I think you can figure the rest out.
The musical numbers are not as elaborate as Busby Berkeley stuff in the Thirties, but are more elaborate than Road films numbers which only had the Crosby/Hope personalities to put them across and they certainly didn't do a bad job.
One interesting bit of casting is that of Donald Woods as Sakall's business manager who plays it like Edward Everett Horton and threatens to close the whole club down and ruin Morgan and Carson. A change of pace for Woods who was never quite a leading man, but was a chameleon like actor who fit into many characters without a bit of personality usually. Here he borrows Horton's.
Dennis's light tenor and Carson's antics are always entertaining.
A nightclub setting that Morgan and Carson own and are trying to open. But they are next door to S.Z. Sakall and Florence Bates and their townhouse. Sakall is a symphony conductor and their granddaughter Martha Vickers is studying grand opera. Funny we hear no operatic notes from her.
What to do but send the old lady killer Morgan into action. But he really falls for Vickers. I think you can figure the rest out.
The musical numbers are not as elaborate as Busby Berkeley stuff in the Thirties, but are more elaborate than Road films numbers which only had the Crosby/Hope personalities to put them across and they certainly didn't do a bad job.
One interesting bit of casting is that of Donald Woods as Sakall's business manager who plays it like Edward Everett Horton and threatens to close the whole club down and ruin Morgan and Carson. A change of pace for Woods who was never quite a leading man, but was a chameleon like actor who fit into many characters without a bit of personality usually. Here he borrows Horton's.
Dennis's light tenor and Carson's antics are always entertaining.
A Beautiful Song-Filled Musical!
This movie is excellent.The cast was wonderful..Dennis Morgan, Jack Carson,Janis Paige,Martha Vickers,S.Z. Sakall and more... WOW!!I especially noticed that Dennis Morgan looked very relaxed in this film.It seemed like he was having lots of fun!He always is excellent in movies with Jack Carson.They performed easily with each other because they were such good friends.It shows!! Janis Paige and Martha Vickers are very lovely and great actresses.My favorite parts in this film are the romantic scenes with Dennis and Martha and when Janis accidentally sprays Jack in the face with a bottle of seltzer.Dennis couldn't help but giggle in that scene!This movie is full of songs and very highly enjoyable!
The songs make it
A boilerplate Warners mid-'40s musical, but a triumph for the Great American Songbook, this backstager has some gorgeous Arthur Schwartz melodies married to Leo Robin lyrics wittier than anything in the script. The Oscar-nominated "Oh, But I Do" is one of Schwartz' loveliest melodies ever, and the little-known "A Thousand Dreams" isn't far behind. There's "A Gal in Calico," which once it gets in your head simply won't leave (it's been in mine for days) and "A Rainy Night in Rio," part of the South American craze then hitting the Hit Parade. There's "A Solid Citizen of the Solid South," done in grimace-inspiring blackface, but actually a pretty good number if you can get past that. All are "diegetic" numbers, meaning they're part of the stage entertainment in the film rather than related to plot or character, and they're backed by luscious Warners orchestrations, which were brassier and jazzier than what the arrangers turned out at Paramount or 20th or MGM. To get to these goodies you have to sit through a lot of inconsequential backstage plot, not to mention the tiresome jowl-shaking of S.Z. Sakall and the badly dated comedy of Jack Carson. But there's Martha Vickers, pretty and appealing, and Janis Paige, always reliable for sex appeal and a tart way with a good line. And Dennis Morgan, a Warners staple in the '40s, who had more presence and testosterone than most of the singing-capon tenors movie musicals of the day typically turned out. Carson and Morgan were sort of Warners' Hope and Crosby and were teamed many times. This is one of their more tolerable efforts, thanks almost exclusively to the efforts of Messrs. Schwartz and Robin.
Pleasant trifle...typical Warner Bros. formula musical...
While THE TIME, THE PLACE AND THE GIRL never rises above being a pleasant little "let's put on a show" musical, it does feature a few sprightly song numbers that are easy on the eyes and ears--and all of the performances are genial and appealing.
Dennis Morgan and Jack Carson are ideal as show biz guys willing to put something over on Martha Vickers in order to get backing for their enterprise. Vickers comes across as even more appealing than she was in THE BIG SLEEP as the nymphomaniacal daughter. And for good measure, there's the always vivacious Janis Paige doing her standard musical comedy thing with finesse. Donald Woods does a standout job as the stuffy tutor of musical pupil Vickers.
Comic relief from Florence Bates and S.Z. Sakall is a big help--especially since the script itself is none too witty. But what really makes the film a special delight are the handsome production values which went into this formula musical and two outstanding songs that are given first-rate treatment: A GIRL FROM CALICO and A RAINY NIGHT IN RIO.
If you like backstage musicals, you'll enjoy this minor delight.
Dennis Morgan and Jack Carson are ideal as show biz guys willing to put something over on Martha Vickers in order to get backing for their enterprise. Vickers comes across as even more appealing than she was in THE BIG SLEEP as the nymphomaniacal daughter. And for good measure, there's the always vivacious Janis Paige doing her standard musical comedy thing with finesse. Donald Woods does a standout job as the stuffy tutor of musical pupil Vickers.
Comic relief from Florence Bates and S.Z. Sakall is a big help--especially since the script itself is none too witty. But what really makes the film a special delight are the handsome production values which went into this formula musical and two outstanding songs that are given first-rate treatment: A GIRL FROM CALICO and A RAINY NIGHT IN RIO.
If you like backstage musicals, you'll enjoy this minor delight.
Did you know
- TriviaThe big production number "A Rainy Night in Rio" was featured prominently in the Bugs Bunny short Long-Haired Hare (1949). In the short, Bugs Bunny disrupts a burly opera singer's rehearsal of The Barber of Seville by singing A Rainy Night in Rio loudly nearby. The opera singer - Giovanni Jones - overhears Bugs Bunny's rendition of the song and absent-mindedly sings along in operatic style. Jones loses his temper repeatedly and accosts Bugs Bunny violently, resulting in Bugs stating his famous and oft-quoted line: "Of course you know this means *war*!" The short proceeds with a sequence of humorous retaliations from Bugs Bunny at Jones' performance later that evening at the Hollywood Bowl.
- Quotes
Ladislaus Cassel: Sheesh!
- ConnectionsFeatured in Let's Sing a Song from the Movies (1948)
- SoundtracksI Happened to Walk Down First Street
Music by Arthur Schwartz
Lyrics by Leo Robin
Performed by Dennis Morgan, Jack Carson, Janis Paige, Angela Greene (perhaps dubbed)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Der Himmel voller Geigen
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 45m(105 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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