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IMDbPro

Sweet Music

  • 1935
  • Approved
  • 1 Std. 40 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,8/10
182
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Ann Dvorak, Allen Jenkins, Helen Morgan, Rudy Vallee, and Alice White in Sweet Music (1935)
Musical

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuCollege band-leader Skip Houston's band becomes professional, finding success on radio and in clubs. He falls for dancer Bonnie Haydon, who initially dislikes his constant critiques, but rea... Alles lesenCollege band-leader Skip Houston's band becomes professional, finding success on radio and in clubs. He falls for dancer Bonnie Haydon, who initially dislikes his constant critiques, but realizes he helps secure her work.College band-leader Skip Houston's band becomes professional, finding success on radio and in clubs. He falls for dancer Bonnie Haydon, who initially dislikes his constant critiques, but realizes he helps secure her work.

  • Regie
    • Alfred E. Green
  • Drehbuch
    • Jerry Wald
    • Carl Erickson
    • Warren Duff
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Rudy Vallee
    • Ann Dvorak
    • Ned Sparks
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    5,8/10
    182
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Alfred E. Green
    • Drehbuch
      • Jerry Wald
      • Carl Erickson
      • Warren Duff
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Rudy Vallee
      • Ann Dvorak
      • Ned Sparks
    • 10Benutzerrezensionen
    • 2Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos15

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    Topbesetzung44

    Ändern
    Rudy Vallee
    Rudy Vallee
    • Skip Houston
    Ann Dvorak
    Ann Dvorak
    • Bonnie Haydon
    Ned Sparks
    Ned Sparks
    • 'Ten Percent' Nelson
    Helen Morgan
    Helen Morgan
    • Helen Morgan
    Robert Armstrong
    Robert Armstrong
    • 'Dopey' Malone
    Allen Jenkins
    Allen Jenkins
    • Barney Cowan
    Alice White
    Alice White
    • Lulu Betts
    Joseph Cawthorn
    Joseph Cawthorn
    • Sidney Selzer
    • (as Joe Cawthorn)
    Al Shean
    Al Shean
    • Sigmund Selzer
    Phillip Reed
    Phillip Reed
    • Grant
    William B. Davidson
    William B. Davidson
    • Billy Madison
    • (as William Davidson)
    Henry O'Neill
    Henry O'Neill
    • Louis Trumble
    Addison Richards
    Addison Richards
    • Mr. Thomas
    Russell Hicks
    Russell Hicks
    • The Mayor
    Clay Clement
    Clay Clement
    • Mr. Johnson
    Rudy Vallee and His Connecticut Yankees
    Rudy Vallee and His Connecticut Yankees
    • The Connecticut Yankees
    • (as Rudy Vallee's Connecticuit Yankees)
    The Frank and Milton Britton Comedy Band
    • The Comedy Band
    • (as The Frank & Milt Britton Band)
    William Bailey
    William Bailey
    • Laughing Man in Audience
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Alfred E. Green
    • Drehbuch
      • Jerry Wald
      • Carl Erickson
      • Warren Duff
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen10

    5,8182
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    5SnoopyStyle

    Rudy Vallee vehicle

    "Skip" Houston (Rudy Vallee) and his Merry Mad Men have been performing at their State University. After graduation, they start playing professionally and gain some success. He likes performer Bonnie Haydon (Ann Dvorak) and tries to help her behind the scenes. At times, she mistakenly assumes that he is against her.

    Once upon a time, Rudy Vallee was a superstar crooner who became a fine actor. Quite frankly, I'm not a fan of his style of music and his acting at this time is not that good. I don't like the comedic attempts. The evil producers are a little too silly. Vallee is too wooden and isn't able to sell the misunderstandings. Ann Dvorak does her best, but this story makes Bonnie look dumb. I actually like the premise.
    7bkoganbing

    Sweet Is The Word

    Dick Powell and Ruby Keeler must have been busy doing Shipmates Forever or Flirtation Walk when Sweet Music was given to Rudy Vallee and Ann Dvorak as leads. The property is typical of the stuff Powell and Keeler were doing at Warner Brothers at the time.

    Vallee appears in Sweet Music with his Connecticut Yankee orchestra and when they weren't backing Rudy up when he was seriously singing, they cut up in a way that was not seen until Spike Jones made an appearance. Rudy and Dvorak start out as rivals for a Broadway review and then a radio show. Of course you know in the end they'll discover true love.

    Ann plays a dancer and I have to say she had some nice moves in Sweet Music. The score is from a variety of composers and it has some Vallee standards like the title song, the comic song Outside which he introduced in the Twenties and There Is A Tavern In the Town. However the main song of the score is the Allie Wrubel-Mort Dixon ballad I See Two Lovers which is done by Helen Morgan.

    Morgan appears as herself and she is singing the song in an audition and Vallee accompanies her with his orchestra. It's one of her great torch ballads and it was also recorded by Russ Columbo and Dick Powell. Any one of the three recordings I have of the song is a treasure.

    Some of Warner Brothers best stock players are in this film with Ned Sparks as an agent, Allen Jenkins as a publicity man with a streak of zaniness in him. One of his zany stunts involves Alice White trying to drown herself for love of Rudy Vallee which results in White's brother Robert Armstrong who's a gangster trying to arrange a shotgun wedding with Vallee and White. Watch the film if you want to see how Rudy gets out of that one.

    Dick and Ruby didn't miss anything with Sweet Music, nevertheless it's a pleasant musical comedy from Warner Brothers and will give the viewer a lot of pleasure still.
    4AlsExGal

    Exhibit A in how the production code fouled things up at Warner Brothers...

    ... at least for a couple of years, and at least for the short B comedies they were making in the production code era. Losing Darryl F. Zanuck at about the same time didn't help matters either, but I digress.

    Skip Houston's (Rudee Vallee's) band and dancer Bonnie Hayden (Ann Dvorak) are both on the same radio program, and go about antagonizing each other for no good perceivable reason. Secretly, Skip is trying to help her by planting positive comments in the columns about her performance and the fans' reaction. In fact, the fans are lukewarm. The two are starting to fall in love, but when Bonnie gets fired, she blames Skip and gives him the cold shoulder. Complications ensue.

    In the precode era, Warner Brothers could turn out a zippy fresh 75 minute comedy pretty easily - some fresh precode one liners and situations punctuated by musical numbers after Busby Berkeley brought musicals back into vogue. But then the production code came along and all of that stopped for awhile, and dreck like this was made for a couple of years. Another film in the same vein as this is "I Live For Love". The problem is that the jokes that could pass the censors just weren't funny.

    In this case, trying to pass for humor, you have bandmembers that smash each other over the head, men doing a fan dance, and Allan Jenkins telling jokes that weren't funny when bustles were still in fashion. For some reason, the wonderful Helen Morgan is imported to sing a torch song, but it just doesn't fit here at all. Plus Dvorak and Vallee have zero chemistry. The only bright spots are Robert Armstrong as a thug who wants to be a crooner and Ned Sparks as a sardonic agent.

    I'd avoid this as it truly is awful.
    7lugonian

    Feuding Partners

    The new cycle of the Warner Brothers musicals that initiated with 42nd STREET (1933) continues with SWEET MUSIC (1935), directed by Alfred E. Green, featuring Rudy Vallee making his debut with the studio, and Ann Dvorak in her first musical role. A story that would have been tailor made for its resident song and dance team of Dick Powell and Ruby Keeler, Warners goes one better in acquiring the services of Vallee (singer), and Dvorak (dancer), supported by familiar Warners stock players, notably Allen Jenkins and Ned Sparks, both being no strangers in these backstage stories.

    The plot revolves around a couple of entertainers: Skip Houston (Rudy Vallee), an orchestra leader whose publicity agent, Barney Cowan (Allen Jenkins) never ceases in coming up with new angles promoting his friend and employer, only to have them backfire on him; and Bonnie Haydon (Ann Dvorak), whose publicity agent, William "Ten Percent" Nelson (Ned Sparks), not only discovered "Ruby Keeler, Al Jolson and Ben Bernie," but takes his ten percent interest in her both financially and personally. Following his engagement at the State University reunion, Skip's next stop is at the Chez Pierre in Chicago where he encounters Bonnie, who has always hated Skip, even more now that her name has been removed and replaced by Skip's on the marquee. Realizing the Houston and Haydon feud might stir up more publicity, Barney arranges in keeping them together after their move to New York City. When the feuding partners show signs of falling in love, misunderstandings take place that keep them apart, thanks to one of the publicity agents.

    An entertaining musical with a handful of good tunes, all forgotten today, that takes up less than half of the 95 minutes of screen time without getting in the way of things, as supplied by an assortment of including from Irving Kahal and Sammy Fain, Allie Wrubel and Mort Dixon; and Al Dubin and Harry Warren. The soundtrack is as follows: "Snake Charmer," "42nd Street" "Fan Dance" (instrumentals); "Sweet Music" (sung by Rudy Vallee); "Ev'ry Day" (sung by Vallee); "Ev'ry Day" (danced by Ann Dvorak); "There's a Different You" (sung by Vallee); "Good Green Acres of Home" (Vallee and male chorus); "The Selzer Theme Song" (sung by Vallee and Dvorak, with Dvorak combining this with "Isn't That the Human Thing to Do"); "Outside," "Tavern in the Town" (both sung by Vallee); "I See Two Lovers" (sung by Helen Morgan); "Sweet Music" (reprise by Vallee); "There'a a Different You," "Fare Thee Well, Annabelle" (sung by Vallee and Dvorak); and "Good Green Acres of Home" (sung by Robert Armstrong).

    In the supporting cast are Alice White as dumb blonde type named Lulu taking part of Barney's publicity stunts who later becomes his wife; Robert Armstrong as her gangster brother "Dopey" Malone, who wants to be a crooner(!); Henry O'Neill as Louis Trumball, a promoter with his nose for news; along with Al Shean and Joseph Cawthorn as the middle-aged accented Selzer brothers. In spite of the legendary Helen Morgan's name being placed fourth in the casting credits, she's seen very briefly in the audition sequence singing a sentimental torch song, "I See Two Lovers," originally written for and discarded from Powell and Keeler's FLIRTATION WALK (1934). This, and its finale, "Fare Thee Well, Annabelle" as choreographed by Bobby Connolly, are highlights. For the film's opening, Connelly attempts to duplicate the Busby Berkeley style by starting off things with a trombone glowing in the dark, followed by overhead camera shot of comic members of the Milt Britton Band spoofing a fan dance number from FASHIONS OF 1934 (1934), among others. For its duration, much of the song and dance takes either at a night club, radio station or theater. While Rudy Vallee's acting proved an embarrassment with his debut film, THE VAGABOND LOVER (RKO, 1929), it has improved considerably by this time, offering him an opportunity in slapstick comedy by cracking a violin over a band member's head as part of a comic act, and his imitation of radio comedian Fred Allen, an Italian and a Englishman during one of his songs numbers. He comes off best singing in patriotic manner, "Green Acres of Home." He and Dvorak work well together as feuding partners exchanging sarcastic remarks at one another. Skip on Bonnie: "You may not care for the dancing, but at least remember she's came from Chicago."

    Quite enjoyable as it is underrated, whenever SWEET MUSIC should ever play on television, which isn't often enough, try locating it on Turner Classic Movies. (***)
    7boblipton

    Kitchen Sink Musical

    Rudy Vallee and his band turn professional about the time Ann Dvorak breaks out of the chorus with the help of agent Ned Sparks. As they move through the bypaths of entertainment, from being kicked out of a Broadway show to radio, they wrangle start to fall in love.

    There's a little bit of everything in this musical, from raw slapstick performed by Vallee's band to idiotic back-and-forth lines traded by Allen Jenkins and Alice White, to gangster Robert Armstrng crooning out of the side of his mouth. There are even signs of satire, offered by Al Shean and Joseph Cawthorne as brothers who sponsor a radio show while they wrangle with each other. In other words, it's a kitchen-sink musical with Rudy Vallee the star of the show. He sings a lot of songs. Most of them do not please me. He singing usually strikes me as mechanical and lifeless, and his orchestrations dull. However, one song, "Fare Thee Well, Annabelle" is performed with a staccato rag beat and a full production number to back it (choreographed by Bobby Connolly) is so far from his usual mode and energetically performed as to enthuse me. There's also a great torch number by Helen Morgan.

    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Allen Jenkins (Barney) and Alice White (Lulu) also played a wacky couple in Ein feiner Herr (1934).
    • Zitate

      Barney Cowan: I got an idea!

      Bonnie Haydon: Give it back! You won't know what to do with it!

    • Verbindungen
      Referenced in The Hollywood Collection: Anthony Quinn an Original (1990)
    • Soundtracks
      Ev'ry Day
      (uncredited)

      Music by Sammy Fain

      Lyrics by Irving Kahal

      Sung by Rudy Vallee

      Danced by Ann Dvorak

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 23. Februar 1935 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Dulces melodías
    • Drehorte
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, Kalifornien, USA(Studio)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Warner Bros.
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 40 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Ann Dvorak, Allen Jenkins, Helen Morgan, Rudy Vallee, and Alice White in Sweet Music (1935)
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    By what name was Sweet Music (1935) officially released in India in English?
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