WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Adventure >

Poor Little Rich Girl

Watch Poor Little Rich Girl For Free

Poor Little Rich Girl

Cossetted and bored, Barbara Barry is finally sent off to school by her busy if doting widowed soap manufacturer father. When her nurse is injured en route, Barbara finds herself alone in town, ending up as part of radio song-and-dance act Dolan and Dolan sponsored by a rival soap company.

... more
Release : 1936
Rating : 7
Studio : 20th Century Fox, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Settings, 
Cast : Shirley Temple Alice Faye Gloria Stuart Jack Haley Michael Whalen
Genre : Adventure Music Family

Cast List

Related Movies

The Apple
The Apple

The Apple   1980

Release Date: 
1980

Rating: 4.3

genres: 
Fantasy  /  Comedy  /  Science Fiction
Habana Blues
Habana Blues

Habana Blues   2005

Release Date: 
2005

Rating: 7.1

genres: 
Drama
Mister Magoo's Christmas Carol
Mister Magoo's Christmas Carol

Mister Magoo's Christmas Carol   1962

Release Date: 
1962

Rating: 7.6

genres: 
Animation  /  Family  /  TV Movie
Stars: 
Jim Backus  /  Morey Amsterdam  /  Jack Cassidy
Fantasia 2000
Fantasia 2000

Fantasia 2000   2000

Release Date: 
2000

Rating: 7.1

genres: 
Animation  /  Music  /  Family
Stars: 
Steve Martin  /  Itzhak Perlman  /  Quincy Jones
The Singing Nun
The Singing Nun

The Singing Nun   1966

Release Date: 
1966

Rating: 6

genres: 
Drama  /  Comedy  /  Music
The Fleet's In
The Fleet's In

The Fleet's In   1942

Release Date: 
1942

Rating: 6.6

genres: 
Music  /  Romance
Stars: 
Dorothy Lamour  /  William Holden  /  Eddie Bracken
Reckless
Reckless

Reckless   1935

Release Date: 
1935

Rating: 6.4

genres: 
Drama  /  Comedy  /  Music
Stars: 
Jean Harlow  /  William Powell  /  Franchot Tone
The Devil's Hand
The Devil's Hand

The Devil's Hand   1961

Release Date: 
1961

Rating: 4.6

genres: 
Horror  /  Mystery
Stars: 
Linda Christian  /  Robert Alda  /  Neil Hamilton
Sarah Brightman: In Concert
Sarah Brightman: In Concert

Sarah Brightman: In Concert   1998

Release Date: 
1998

Rating: 8.1

genres: 
Music
Come Clean
Come Clean

Come Clean   1931

Release Date: 
1931

Rating: 7.2

genres: 
Comedy
Stars: 
Stan Laurel  /  Oliver Hardy  /  Mae Busch
Pagan Love Song
Pagan Love Song

Pagan Love Song   1950

Release Date: 
1950

Rating: 5.8

genres: 
Drama  /  Music  /  Romance
Stars: 
Esther Williams  /  Howard Keel  /  Minna Gombell

Reviews

Intcatinfo
2018/08/30

A Masterpiece!

More
SanEat
2018/08/30

A film with more than the usual spoiler issues. Talking about it in any detail feels akin to handing you a gift-wrapped present and saying, "I hope you like it -- It's a thriller about a diabolical secret experiment."

More
BelSports
2018/08/30

This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.

More
Bob
2018/08/30

This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.

More
MartinHafer
2016/01/16

"Poor Little Rich Girl" is an interesting Shirley Temple movie because it seems to have been, at least in part, the inspiration for the 90s film "Baby's Day Out"!When the film begins, Barbara (Shirley Temple) is a pampered little girl living in a mansion. But she's also lonely and begs her father to send her to school. Instead of having her live at home and go to school (what normal folks would do), he decides to send her off to a residential school. On the way, however, she's separated from her governess when the lady is run over!!! This part sure shocked us! And Barbara just wanders off and ends up in the poor section of town. There she recognizes characters from a story book she loved and sees everything as a big adventure...and she tells everyone she's the little orphan girl, Bonny, from the book.During the course of Barbara's adventures, she meets up with the Dolans (Alice Faye and Jack Haley). The Dolans just accept Barbara's story that she's an orphan and take her in...never contacting the police or children's services! Much of this might be because she's a great singer and they want to put her in their singing/dancing act. Oddly, Barbara doesn't seem to miss her father nor does he seem to notice that she never arrived at the school!!! What a weird story.During the course of the film, Shirley sings a lot of cute but forgettable songs (there's no "Good Ship Lollipop" song in this one!), dances with Haley and Faye and is gosh-darned adorable. Pretty much, all the stuff you'd normally expect in a Temple movie...but with a MUCH weirder and nonsensical plot than usual. In addition there's a weird guy who likes to look in the windows at Barbara and offers to take her out to buy her candy--and I think he's supposed to be a pedophile (my wife, incidentally, thought maybe he was just a fortune-hunter who wanted to kidnap her)!!! Because of this, I wouldn't rank it among he better Temple outings but like almost all her other films (with the exception of "The Blue Bird") she made as a child, it's fun and worth seeing--and the kid is just adorable. Among the best part of the movie, by the way, is the cute portion where Barbara wins the heart of a grouchy old guy who looks to be the inspiration for Jeff Dunham's character 'Walter'! Well worth seeing despite its flaws.By the way, at the very end, Faye, Haley and Temple dress up and do a song AND dance routine...and it's supposed to be on the radio!! Does this make any sense at all?!

More
vincentlynch-moonoi
2011/04/13

A little better than standard fare from 20th Century Fox's financial savior -- Shirley Temple. The story gets off to a bit of a slow start as sheltered rich girl Shirley gets sent away to school so she can be with other children. But, her chaperon loses her purse to a crook, and while looking for it is struck by a car, thus separating Shirley from her chaperon (whose fate we never discover...you'll recognize her as Judge Hardy's sister from the Andy Hardy films). On her own, Shirley gets lost in the city and befriends an organ grinder and his monkey...but an evil kidnapper has his eye on Shirley. In the same apartment building where all this is happening are hoofers Alice Faye (who later the same year will hit it big in "In Old Chicago") and Jack Haley (who 3 years later will be the Tin Man in "The Wizard Of Oz"). Shirley, Haley, and Faye land a contract with the rival soap company (owned by Claude Gillingwater) to her father's company...which ultimately leads to father and daughter being reunited.Aside from Shirley's usual bubbliness, are great performances by a number of co-stars. How can anyone not enjoy the lovably grumpy antics of Claude Gillingwater? And, its the scenes between Gillingwater and Temple that are just about the most charming you'll see in any old film! Gloria Stewart (the old lady of "Titanic" fame) plays the love interest to Shirley's father.There are some nice songs here, too: "When I'm With You", the remarkably entertaining "You've Gotta Each Your Spinach, Baby" (with Temple, Faye, and Haley), and the tap-dancing finale "A Military Man" (again, Temple, Faye, and Haley) is one of the most memorable in any of the Temple films...one I remembered from when I was a child 50 years ago! Something to watch for: 21 minutes into the film, as "daddy" picks Shirley up, there's a little too much of Shirley's thigh showing...and Shirley has the presence to pull down her dress a bit more modestly. A goof, but left in during the age of innocence.

More
lugonian
2006/01/31

THE POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL (20th Century-Fox, 1936), directed by Irving Cummings, stars Shirley Temple who may be little, not quite poor but rich in talent, as displayed in the screenplay suggested by the stories by Eleanor Gates and Ralph. The plot was used earlier as a Mary Pickford film back in 1917, and with numerous alterations and updated material, the revised version, turns out to be, in fact, a modern-day fairy tale on how a little girl, acting out her storybook fantasy, to happily go out and change the lives of the people she meets along the way, only to become a popular radio star, at least during its second half anyway.The story revolves around a child named Barbara Barry (Shirley Temple), a rich little girl who has everything but the utmost attention of her widowed father (Michael Whalen), a wealthy soap manufacturer, and the joys of being like other children by having playmates her own age as companions. She is cared by a Collins (Sara Haden), her nurse, and Woodward (Jane Darwell), the housekeeper who takes the time to read "Betsy Ware" stories to her. Because she is a lonely child, Barry decides to have Collins accompany Barbara to the Forest Grove School in the Adirondacks (upstate New York) where her late mother once attended. While at Grand Central Station waiting for the train, tragedy strikes as Collins walks out in traffic to locate her missing purse (which has been stolen) only to be struck by a passing car. Left alone with her luggage, Barbara takes off on her own, assuming the fictitious name of her favorite storybook character, orphan Betsy Ware, and starts her own adventure. She first encounters Tony (Henry Armetta), an Italian organ grinder with his monkey, who, feeling sorry for this "orphan," agrees to take her into his home along with his wife (Mathilde Comonte) and his other "bambinos." Sometime later, "Betsy" displays her tap dancing talent to Tony's family that catches the attention to an upstairs neighbor and unemployed hoofer and singers, Jimmy and Jerry Dolan (Jack Haley and Alice Faye). Seeing this child to have a considerable amount of talent, she's "adopted" to become part of their musical act called "Dolan, Dolan & Dolan," with Barbara, a/k/a Betsy, now acting as their "daughter," Bonnie. The audition lands them a job performing for soap manufacturer Simon Peck (Claude Gillingwater), who turns out to be Barry's competitor, who in turn, has become very much interested in Margaret Allen (Gloria Stuart), Peck's advertising girl.The music and lyrics by Mack Gordon and Harry Revel include: "Oh, My Goodness" (sung by Shirley Temple); "Buy a Bar of Barry's" (sung by radio singers); "When I'm With You" (sung by Tony Martin); "When I'm With You" (sung by Temple); "But Definitely" (sung by Alice Faye and Temple); "Where There's Life, There's Soap" (sung by Temple); "When I'm With You" (sung by Faye); "You've Got to Eat Your Spinach, Baby" (sung by Faye, Temple and Jack Haley); "When I'm With You" (sung by Temple) and "Military Man" (sung and dance finale with Temple, Haley and Faye).Musically entertaining, often amusing, occasionally cutesy, quite contrived, yet never dull, POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL has many fine things going for it. While such a story might lack logic for first time viewers, having child separating herself from father and nurse only to roam about the city by herself to meet new people, never considering how they must feel once her disappearance is discovered. Along the way, child meets up with several she identifies from her storybook (particularly Jimmy whom she calls "Puddenhead"), a great many being good people, but in true storybook form, there's usually a villain. John Wray, cast as Fagin, is such a character. He's in and out throughout the story, visually seen as spying on little Barbara from a distance or nearby. It's quite evident that his intentions are not honorable. While much of the story cannot actually happen in real life, the stalker following a child comes to be more true to life now than ever before, thus giving the writers some opportunity in adding a little touch of suspense. On the brighter side, the story also features an old grouch, wonderfully played by Gillingwater, whose Ebenezer Scrooge-type performance softens into giving little "Bonnie" a piggy back ride in his office.With Temple as the talented child who can sing and dance to perfection, she's equally surrounded by secondary performers Haley and Faye as the song and dance team, who not only share the spotlight with their leading star, but get to solo or perform together as well. Gloria Stuart and Michael Whalen, enacting as the second secondary actors, provide some love interest, but on the whole, have very little to do during its 80 minutes of screen time. The obvious success to POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL, having turned out to be another assembly of popular Temple vehicles, was revamped two years later under the guise as REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM (1938), also set in a radio station.Not counting commercial television broadcasts prior to the 1990s, POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL's cable history did enjoy frequent television showings, ranging from its colorized version from the Disney Channel (colorized), to black and white on American Movie Classics (1997-2001) Fox Movie Channel, and Turner Classic Movies (TCM premiere July 23, 2010) as well as availability on video cassette and DVD in both B&W and colorized formats. During its AMC broadcasts, there were occasions when a theatrical trailer preceded the feature presentation. Quite interesting in fact the trailer includes a couple of outtakes, Temple in the bath-tub, and a completely different musical conclusion. Temple fans might find it hard to imagine watching POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL without that military dance finale (although tap dancing would be hard to appreciate listening to from the radio). In spite of some pros and cons, is POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL recommended viewing? But definitely. (***)

More
KT-31
1999/08/29

After all these years and with all the changes within our society it is amazing to feel the charm of this sparkling young girl. Even with Jack Haley, Alice Faye and Claude Gillingwater providing such good support, there is no doubt who makes this film work - Shirley Temple.A child that any parent could be proud of. Strong-willed, intelligent, talented, and fearless yet obedient and loving.The performance, with Jack and Alice of the "Spinach" song, coupled with the final dance routine would, by themselves, make this movie worth watching repeatedly.

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now