Coming back from a Ocean trip to New York, Loyce Whiteman, Harry Barris and Art Jarrett decide to visit composer Burton Lane, who is also aboard to rehearse a little. Saxophonists Benny Krue... Read allComing back from a Ocean trip to New York, Loyce Whiteman, Harry Barris and Art Jarrett decide to visit composer Burton Lane, who is also aboard to rehearse a little. Saxophonists Benny Krueger and Rudy Wiedhoeft meet and joke with their instruments, also commenting on prohibitio... Read allComing back from a Ocean trip to New York, Loyce Whiteman, Harry Barris and Art Jarrett decide to visit composer Burton Lane, who is also aboard to rehearse a little. Saxophonists Benny Krueger and Rudy Wiedhoeft meet and joke with their instruments, also commenting on prohibition. Songstress Sylvia Froos is singing at home while reading the paper. When she reads a st... Read all
- Self - Singer
- (as Art Jarett)
- Self - Singer
- (as Lois Whiteman)
- Self - Singer
- (uncredited)
- Columinst's Colleague
- (uncredited)
- Self
- (uncredited)
- Self - Pianist
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
In this second installment, a group of performers see each other on a cruise ship and decide to get together to sing and have a good time. This is a very thin plot for what really is just a typical Vitaphone musical short with a story line running it all together. However, this plot didn't seem all that important after a while and it came off more like a talent show than anything else. And, only at the end does Wald make an appearance.
So is it any good? Well, it's hard to say today because times have changed and so have tastes. It all seemed rather lame to me, but it's easy to feel this way almost 80 years later. In addition, some of these celebrities were well-known at the time but are all but forgotten today. I got very little out of the short and wish it had least offered a nice chance to see Kate Smith perform like the previous short in the series.
They were dead in 1932 only nobody knew it yet. Yet here it is in this package and a very early credit (writing, producing and directing) for Jerry Wald. One wonders if and from whom Wald stole the idea from. A rare visit from classic songwriter/show tune composer Burton Lane is slightly interesting but obviously this series didn't last too long and Wald soon graduated from this and by 1935 was getting writing credits on features. Today it has very little entertainment value and is merely of curiosity value and as an artifact of the more mundane levels of the show business of the era.
This isn't a short to go out of your way to find, but it's passably enjoyable if you come across it. More than anything else, 'Rambling 'round radio row #2' may be most notable simply as a snapshot of cinema in the early 1930s. Take that as you will.
This is a must for Crosbyphiles.
Did you know
- TriviaIncluded in Warner Home Video's 2006 6-disc DVD release "The Busby Berkeley Collection".
- ConnectionsFollowed by Rambling 'Round Radio Row #3 (1933)
- SoundtracksHummin' to Myself
(uncredited)
Music by Sammy Fain
Lyrics by Herb Magidson and Monty Siegel
Sung by Arthur Jarrett with Burton Lane on piano
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Pepper Pot (1932-1933 season) #6: Rambling 'Round Radio Row #2
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 9m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1