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Show Business
Musical about vaudeville performers, from 1944.
Release : | 1944 |
Rating : | 6.4 |
Studio : | RKO Radio Pictures, |
Crew : | Makeup Artist, Director, |
Cast : | Eddie Cantor Joan Davis George Murphy Nancy Kelly Dick Elliott |
Genre : | Comedy Music Romance |
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Reviews
Memorable, crazy movie
Absolutely Fantastic
In truth, there is barely enough story here to make a film.
The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.
We have a musical that starts well but then fades until you are finally glad that it has come to an end. The cast are fine when it comes to singing and dancing especially in the first half of the film – some great songs and sequences. However, the lead character as played by George Murphy isn't nice to his girlfriend Nancy Kelly from the start and so the audience aren't really on his side from the beginning. In fact, none of the relationships make sense – his other alliance with Constance Moore is totally confusing. She divorces him, then wants him back – it never makes sense. The film suffers because it chooses to follow this unrealistic love triangle story that would just never be there. Eddie Cantor and Joan Davis provide the comedy partnership and deliver their lines well, but you have to be a Cantor fan to enjoy his schtick.There are moments of humour and good songs but why perform "It Had to Be You" three times? It was good on the first occasion but then becomes corny. The film gets boring, I'm sad to say.
Want to know what vaudeville was like? This film will probably give you a pretty good idea.I watched it because one of the stars is the great Eddie Cantor. It's sort of an ensemble picture, so you can't say that Cantor was THE star here, but let's face it, he was one of the truly greats. If there's a problem with Cantor here it's that he's playing a young fellow when he was 52! But he pulls it off...sorta. The gem of the picture is when he sings one of his standards -- "Makin' Whoopee". And, BTW, one of our other reviewers suggests that Cantor's character was clearly gay in this film. Bull toddy. Apparently wishful thinking.I didn't watch this film because of George Murphy. I've never sat down to watch a Murphy film, but sometimes ran into him when he was also in a cast. Here I was quite impressed. A pretty smooth hoofer, and decent in the acting department. I may have to watch a few other films of his and re-evaluate.Joan Davis never quite made it to the top, and was probably better suited for television than films (and she did later go into television; "I Married Joae"). She usually played a goof ball, as she does here, and she was pretty good at slapstick.The surprise for me here was Nancy Kelly. I guess I've seen her in films before and not paid much attention. She is very good here.Constance Moore...no more, please.The plot here is...well, not thin, but typical. Boy meets girl, boy wins girl, couple lose baby, boy loses girl, boy becomes alcoholic, but eventually they live happily ever after. Nothing new, but nicely done.
Another Leslie Halliwell favourite, this period musical follows the pattern of several others of its ilk – the career from obscurity to popularity, hitting the skids and the climb back to the top of a burlesque/vaudeville troupe (apparently, the former is deemed a low- grade art form and despised by the latter, but there is little to differentiate them in this film and elsewhere!). Incidentally, co-star George Murphy – whom the fall from grace hits the hardest here – had also featured in the very similar (also comparable quality-wise) FOR ME AND MY GAL (1942), where it was Gene Kelly who got on the wrong end of fame and fortune.The movie under review was actually instigated by comedian Eddie Cantor (who personally produced it): he had had a successful run of star vehicles with Samuel Goldwyn in the 1930s, followed by a couple of well- regarded efforts for other studios later on – Warners' star-studded THANK YOUR LUCKY STARS (1943) and this one, made over at RKO (its success even prompted a sequel, named after one of Cantor's best-known tunes i.e. IF YOU KNEW SUSIE {1948}). There is actually an autobiographical element to SHOW BUSINESS, since the character he plays obtains his greatest hit with Cantor's very own "Makin' Whoopee" (which inspired his 1930 star vehicle)! Also on hand is comedienne Joan Davis, whose initial disdain for Cantor grows into a true and almost protective love – frequently breaking the fourth wall to assure the viewer that she cannot help herself; their Cleopatra routine is a hoot!The film encompasses comedy, songs (notably the standard "It Had To Be You", sung – either alternately or concurrently – by Murphy and love interest Nancy Kelly), romance (the latter broken up by his former partner, in both senses of the word) and nostalgia and, while neither the classic Halliwell deems it to be (conversely, Leonard Maltin rated it a more modest **1/2) nor Cantor's most representative work (that would be ROMAN SCANDALS {1933}), there is no doubt that it offers solid entertainment throughout and, as stated in an after-credits title-card, was conceived primarily as wartime escapism for American audiences, be they at home or abroad fighting.
SHOW BUSINESS (what an imaginative title) is a look back at the heyday of vaudeville, with nods to its antecedent, burlesque. When this was made in 1944, vaudeville wasn't that long gone, so I suspect a lot of the original audience must have found the movie a strong nostalgia pull. Eddie Cantor and George Murphy play two vaudevillians hooked up with a pair of female vaudevillians played by Joan Davis and Constance Moore. They perform classic number after classic number in a virtually plot-free movie. Cantor of course is marvelous, if a little long in the tooth for the role. Murphy and Davis, both pretty young at the time, hold their own. Only Moore seems out of place, although she does her best. Musical numbers\include "It Had to Be You" and the Al Jolson classic, "Dinah." A blackface number comes as a shock to these 21st century eyes, but what are you gonna do? Cut it out? I am sure it was in years past, but the number is integral to the proceedings and entertaining without being overtly offensive. It reminds the viewer of vaudeville's deepest roots, the minstrel shows of centuries past.