Racketeer Frank Rocci is smitten with Joan Whelan, a dancer at Texas Guinan's famous Broadway night spot. He uses his influence to help her get a starring role in the show, hoping that it wi... Read allRacketeer Frank Rocci is smitten with Joan Whelan, a dancer at Texas Guinan's famous Broadway night spot. He uses his influence to help her get a starring role in the show, hoping that it will also get Joan to fall in love with him. After scoring a hit, Joan accepts Frank's marri... Read allRacketeer Frank Rocci is smitten with Joan Whelan, a dancer at Texas Guinan's famous Broadway night spot. He uses his influence to help her get a starring role in the show, hoping that it will also get Joan to fall in love with him. After scoring a hit, Joan accepts Frank's marriage proposal, more out of gratitude than love. The situation gets even stickier when she f... Read all
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This must have been embarrassing for Darryl Zanuck. After overseeing most of the early thirties' greatest films at Warner Brothers then flouncing off to create Twentieth Century Pictures (Fox would join soon) he seemed to have expected that just he, himself was all that was needed to make fantastic films. But he made this! He may have taken his impressive talent, his progressive and campaigning attitude with him but not, by the look of this, any actors who could act (acting in this is uniformly atrocious by everyone), directors who could direct and writers who could write.
Compared with similar musicals from this time: his own classic Busby Berkeleys at Warners or what Victor Saville was doing at Gaumont-British (with Jessie Matthews), this seems like it was made either years earlier or using obsolete ancient equipment that Zanuck managed to stash in the back of his car on his last day at Warners; it looks so cheap.
Watching this gives the impression that the setting up of Twentieth Century hadn't quite been completed by the time they made this. It was just their second ever film and it really shows. Since Zanuck had made the greatest musicals and gangster pictures up to that date, he thought he could combine both his speciality genres and make millions with this. The result however is awful: the blending of a hard-hitting crime drama with an upbeat, cheerful musical doesn't work. We just end up with the worst of both worlds.
Constance Cummings stars as the ambitious Joan who allows gangster Rocci (Paul Kelly) to feature her in a show at a night club he buys from Tex Kaley (legendary Texas Guinan, the original Queen of the Nightclubs). She becomes a star but has to skip off to Miami when gangland wars threaten Rocci. She takes an old friend (legendary Blossom Seeley who doesn't get to sing) as a chaperone but falls in love with a local crooner (Russ Columbo).
Somce nice plot twists and snappy numbers keep this one interesting. There's also some interesting sexual innuendo going on with Rocci's devoted "pal" (Hugh O'Connell), Seeley in drag and being taken for a man by a porter, and Columbo playing a wimp who's afraid of the sun and practically panics when he gets a sliver in his finger. Lots of nice little twists.
The film is a rare showcase for Frances Williams, who was a big Broadway star. She gets to sing the best song: The Uptown Low Down. She dances too. Hobart Cavanaugh, Gregory Ratoff, Eddie Foy Jr., C. Henry Gordon, Helen Jerome Eddy, Fred Santley, and Wheeler Oakman co-star. Also look for the two bimbos accompanying Louis the Lug. They are Ann Sothern and Lucille Ball as bleached blondes. One of the wisecracking dames during the early rehearsal scene is Esther Muir, noted for several Marx Bros films. Guinan and Seeley steal all their scenes.
Lowell Sherman, Texas Guinan, and Russ Columbo would all be dead within a year of the film's completion. Sherman had a 20-year career as a star in films and turned out several excellent films as a director, most notably Morning Glory and She Done Him Wrong.
Worth a look.
The plot of Broadway Through a Keyhole is nothing original, your typical backstage show business story so popular in the 1930s. But it's good to see talents like Eddie Foy, Jr., Constance Cummings, Blossom Seeley and Texas Guinan doing their thing. Paul Kelly is his usual competent self as the gangster rival of Russ's for Constance Cummings. But if you can see the film, the main reason to see it and why it ought to be preserved is as a showcase for Russ Columbo.
Columbo's commercial records, done mostly for RCA Victor, are love songs. He has two numbers in Broadway Through a Keyhole, You're My Past, Present, and Future which is a nice Harry Revel-Mack Gordon ballad which he never commercially recorded. He also sings a duet with Constance Cummings titled I Love You Pizzicato which displays a nice comic touch.
Russ Columbo only recorded about 30 sides commercially from 1930 to 1932. A contractual dispute kept him out of the recording studio until August 31, 1934 where he recorded four sides under a new contract for Brunswick records. On September 2, 1934 he was shot to death in a freak accident involving an antique cap and ball dueling pistol.
Columbo was no great actor in this film, but that's not to say that he might not have become one as Crosby did or Crosby's main rival Frank Sinatra. The Sinatra you see in Higher and Higher, his first feature film part, was no great actor either, not like he later became.
See the film if you can and speculate for yourself about the unfinished talent that was Russ Columbo.
The music was written by the team of Bert Gordon/Harry Revel but the songs are not good ones and none became a standard. This was the biggest letdown when watching the movie, even more so than the uninspired screenplay. I guess the only thing to recommend it is the novelty of the appearance of the three stars in the same picture. The title is merely a tantalizing come-on for a small return.
While I found this film reasonably diverting, I must admit that the script was a bit hard to believe from time to time. Not a terrible film but one that should have been better...and less schmaltzy.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film is based so exactly on the courtship of Ruby Keeler and Al Jolson that Jolson, having read the script, knocked out Walter Winchell when they met accidentally at the Hollywood American Legion stadium on the night of July 21, 1933. Keeler, who was a dancer at Texas Guinan's nightclub, was dating gangster Larry Fay when she met Jolson. Fay visited Jolson after hearing of this just to tell him that he could marry her.
- Quotes
2nd Girl with Louie at the Beach: [after Louie's friends walk away from him] Well, you certainly were the life of the party, Louie, while it lasted...
- ConnectionsEdited into Prohibition: Thirteen Years That Changed America (1997)
- SoundtracksDoin' the Uptown Lowdown
Music by Harry Revel
Lyrics by Mack Gordon
Sung and Danced by Frances Williams with chorus and the Abe Lyman Orchestra (as Abe Lyman Band)
Danced by Dewey Barto and George Mann
Details
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- Broadway Love
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- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1