Irving Berlin No Business Like Business Show is 1954 20th Century-Fox DeLuxe Color music-comedy-drama at CinemaScope, directed by Walter Lang. It stars an ensemble cast, comprising Ethel Merman, Dan Dailey, Donald O'Connor, Mitzi Gaynor, Marilyn Monroe, Johnnie Ray, and Richard Eastham.
The title was borrowed from the famous song on the music stage (and the MGM movie) Annie Get Your Gun . The scenario was written by Phoebe Ephron and Henry Ephron, based on the story of Lamar Trotti; and the film is Fox's first musical in CinemaScope and DeLuxe Color.
Donald O'Connor then called the film the best picture he ever made.
Video There's No Business Like Show Business (film)
Plot
In 1919, Terence Donahue and his wife, Molly were the husband and wife vaudeville teams known as Donahues, pursuing stable family life as well as professional success. Their children, Steve, Katy, and Tim, join the action one by one, and their actions eventually become Five Donahues. The family was successful and soon reached the top.
One night after the show, Molly and Terry are worried about coming home alone while Katy goes on a date, Steve goes for a walk, and the feminine Team goes with an older choir girl. Katy and Tim both end up in a nightclub where Tim teases Victoria Hoffman. Vicky forgot Tim's words of wisdom, however, when Eddie Dugan, his agent, told him that he had persuaded renowned producer Lew Harris to visit the club. With the help of his coworkers, Vicky climbed onto the stage and made Lew and Tim feel impressed by the singing. Backstage, Vicky learned that Tim was one of the famous Donahues but quickly refused to talk business with Harris.
Back at Donahue's house, Steve tells his family that he wants to become a pastor. Terry is confused over his son's decision, but their discussion is interrupted by Tim's appearance, who is drunk after he is dismissed by Vicky.
After Steve left for a seminary school, the four Donahues who had received treason received an engagement in Miami. Upon arrival, Tim was delighted to discover that Hoffman, now known as Vicky Parker, also appeared there; but he does a much more sensual version of Heat Wave, the same number as the family. After falling in full passion with Vicky's performance during practice, the Team gave her consent to do the numbers without checking with the previous family.
Katy started dating Charlie Gibbs, a tall and cheerful lyricist, and Tim was dating Vicky. After a misunderstanding of a broken dinner date with Vicky, Tim went out drinking with the choir girl and had a car accident. Molly and Terry learn from the accident just hours before opening the night of the show that she, Vicky and Katy have practiced, and Terry went to the hospital to confront Tim about his behavior. The team rejected the suggestion, then Terry slapped his face and came out the storm. The next day, Terry and Molly return to the hospital to pick up Tim but find that he has vanished, leaving a note apologizing for his behavior. Molly and Terry were both heartbroken but decided to take action.
Molly assured Lew that, while she had to pretend to dance, a feat she'd gained over the years, she could go to Tim's place, after practice every night for months. Steve has been summoned to the Army as pastor and sent to Europe where his whereabouts are also unknown. A few weeks later, the event was a huge success, but Terry was still saddened by Team's disappearance. After dropping Molly off at the theater to perform that night, she disappears down the street in her son's quest, which clearly destroys Molly very high, having the three men in her life in their present unknown existence.
Months later at the awards ceremony for the closing night of the famous New York Hippodrome Theater, Katy, who has since become a close friend of Vicky, arranged for her to share her dressing room with her mother to teach her a very worthy lesson. Looking through his daughter's manipulation and deeply troubled by it, Molly starts packing up and heads up for some peace and quiet, however, Katy not only tells her mother that she will do such a thing, but that she needs to apologize to Vicky for insulting her at every curves over the last year. Very angry at the idea, he wants to know why, and Katy calmly tells him that what happened to Tim, he took it himself. Seeing the truth about her youngest son, Molly relents and speaks at length with Vicky, who assures her that she has never played with Tim and that she loves him all along. They make up and Vicky takes the place backstage. Steve comes suddenly, they share a hug, and Molly admits that he's also very stubborn and never gives Vicky a chance he deserves.
When Molly played the title song, Steve and Katy watched from the wings; then Tim, dressed in a US Navy uniform, appeared behind them. Pleased to reunite, Five Donahues, with Vicky holding tight to Tim's hands, all going onto the stage and happily repeating a brief encore of their version of "Alexander's Ragtime Band" before repeating with the end of the song title.
Maps There's No Business Like Show Business (film)
Cast
Starring (in credit order)
- Ethel Merman as Molly Donahue
- Donald O'Connor as Tim Donahue
- Marilyn Monroe as Victoria Hoffman
- And Dailey as Terence Donahue
- Johnnie Ray as Steve Donahue
- Mitzi Gaynor as Katy Donahue
Featured player
- Richard Eastham as Lew Harris
- Hugh O'Brian as Charles Gibbs
- Frank McHugh as Eddie Dugan
- Rhys Williams as Father Dineen
- Lee Patrick as Marge
- Eve Miller as Hatcheck Girl
- Robin Raymond as Lilliam Sawyer
Soundtrack
All the songs written by Irving Berlin.
Production
In the months prior to the filming, Marilyn Monroe was placed on the suspension of 20th Century-Fox after refusing to accept the lead role in the movie version of The Girl in Pink Tights. During his suspension, he married Joe DiMaggio's baseball star and both honeymooners in Japan, where he took time to entertain soldiers in Korea. Fox intends to give Sheree North on the picture, going further to test the actress in Monroe's own wardrobe. When the star returns to Hollywood, his Fox suspension is lifted, and the studio executive offers him a role in the ensemble player No Business Like Show Business as a replacement project for refusing to create Tights Pink. Monroe initially refused to make the image as he had for his previous offerings until Fox assured him that his next vehicle was The Seven Year Itch .
Ethel Merman was first sung "No Business Like Business Show" in original Broadway production Annie Get Your Gun in 1946 and will continue to sing it again on the next 1967 Lincoln Center television show. resurrection.
Release and acceptance
To publish the film, Monroe wore a black polka-dot cotton swimsuit. It was auctioned at Christie's in London in 1991 and sold for $ 22,400 to collector David Gainsborough Roberts.
Despite the proud plush production, No Business Like Business Show ultimately became a critical failure and box office.
Ed Sullivan described Monroe's performance of the song "Heat Wave" as "one of the most striking violations of good taste" he has witnessed. Time Magazine compares it to Ethel Merman's opponent. Bosley Crowther at The New York Times referred to the film as a "great success" in generally favorable reviews, praising especially the performance of Donald O'Connor, but said that Mitzi Gaynor has surpassed the "stretched and stretched" Monroe "embarrassing to be seen." Donald O'Connor drew unfavorable reviews for "over-acting" and "teasing superbly" with Monroe on display. And Dailey and Johnnie Ray are favored among critics, although reviewers state that their appearance is "below average".
The film budget is $ 4.34 million. Overwhelming at the time for the film was filmed entirely in many studios in Los Angeles, the cost was mainly due to delays in production, the amount of fancy music and running time that was at least 15 minutes longer than most other Hollywood musicals. Because the film made just $ 5,103,555 at the box office, and became the thirteenth best-selling film in 1954, 20th Century Fox officials were disappointed.
According to records, Fox expects a profit of $ 2 million, but lost nearly $ 950,000. It is also important that Johnnie Ray never works again for 20th Century Fox or appears in other films made by major movie studios in the United States or other countries, although his music is growing stronger after being abroad than in the United States.
Broadcasting on local television stations in the 1970s and 1980s was not good for the Inheritance No Business Like Business Show because it guaranteed a time slot of at least three hours including advertisements and due to lack of letterboxing during that era. The release to the home video market in the early 1990s, which solved the problem of commercial interruptions despite the fixed aspect ratio issue of Cinemascope, increased its profits significantly. The DVD release in 2001 that included letterboxing introduced the film to the younger generation. It has received good reviews from critics and fans.
Awards and honor
The film is recognized by the American Film Institute in this list:
- 2006: AFI Largest Musical Movie - Nominated
References
External links
- No Business Like Business Show in IMDb
- No Business Like Business Show in AllMovie
- No Business Like Show Business in TCM Movie Database
- No Business Like Show Business in the American Movies Film Catalog
- No Business Like Business Show at Rotten Tomatoes
Source of the article : Wikipedia