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Hold Everything

 
Movies:

Hold Everything

  • Director: Roy Del Ruth
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Musical
  • Movie Type: Sports Drama
  • Main Cast: Joe E. Brown, Winnie Lightner, Sally O'Neil, Edmund Breese
  • Release Year: 1930
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 78 minutes

Plot

The opening attraction at New York's Hollywood Theatre, Hold Everything was adapted from the DeSylva-Brown-Henderson musical of the same name that had served as a vehicle for Bert Lahr. For the film, both Lahr and most of the score were jettisoned, replaced by Joe E. Brown and songs by Al Dubin and Joe Burke. Brown plays Gink Schiner, a third-rate fighter who is at the same training camp as Georges LaVerne (played by Georges Carpentier), a contender for the heavyweight championship. Although he needs to be concentrating all of his energies on the upcoming bout, Georges keeps getting distracted: Norine Lloyd, a society dame, has a distinct interest in him, but the interest is strictly one-sided. Georges prefers Sue, an old buddy and confidante. Gink has woman trouble of his own, as his flirtations do not sit at all well with Toots, his erstwhile girl friend. More trouble arrives when Larkin, manager of current heavyweight champ Bob Morgan, appears at the camp with the goal of fixing the fight. He is sent packing, after which he attempts to slip a Mickey Finn to the challenger -- a plan which goes awry when Gink switches the drinks. Meanwhile, Gink, who is fighting in a preliminary in advance of the big fight, actually wins. Things don't look so bright for Georges, who initially gets the worst of it in his encounter with Morgan, but who eventually comes out on top. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide

Cast

Bert Roach - Nosey Bartlett; Dorothy Revier - Norine Lloyd; Lew Harvey - Dan Larkin; James Quinn; Ann Sothern - Bit Part; Jack Curtis - Murph Levy

Credit

Larry Ceballos - Choreography, Roy Del Ruth - Director, William Holmes - Editor, Lew Brown - Composer (Music Score), Ray Henderson - Composer (Music Score), Joe Burke - Composer (Music Score), Devereaux Jennings - Cinematographer, Buddy G. DeSylva - Screenwriter, Robert Lord - Screenwriter, John McGowan - Screenwriter, Buddy G. DeSylva - Play Author, John McGowan - Play Author
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Wikipedia: Hold Everything (1930 film)
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Hold Everything (1930)
Directed by Roy Del Ruth
Written by Robert Lord
based on the play by Buddy G. DeSylva, Ray Henderson and John McGowan
Starring Winnie Lightner
Joe E. Brown
Music by Joseph Burke
Ray Henderson
Cinematography Devereaux Jennings (Technicolor)
Editing by William Holmes
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) March 20, 1930
Running time originally listed as 10 reels
Country  United States
Language English

Hold Everything (1930) is an early all-talking film. It was the first musical comedy film to be released that was photographed entirely in early two-color Technicolor. It was adapted from the DeSylva-Brown-Henderson Broadway musical of the same name that had served as a vehicle for Bert Lahr and starred Winnie Lightner and Joe E. Brown as the comedy duo. The romantic subplot was played by Georges Carpentier and Sally O'Neil. Only one song from the stage show remained: "You're the Cream in My Coffee". New songs were written for the film by Al Dubin and Joe Burke, including one that became a hit in 1930: "When The Little Red Roses Get The Blues For You". The songs in the film were played by Abe Lyman and his orchestra.

Contents

History

In 1930, this was the first film shown at the newly opened Warner Bros. Hollywood Theatre, a luxurious New York City movie palace specifically designed to showcase its then-revolutionary Vitaphone sound films. The theatre later became a legitimate Broadway venue, the Mark Hellinger Theatre, and is now the home of the Times Square Church.[1]

Synopsis

Brown plays Gink Schiner, a third-rate fighter who is at the same training camp as Georges LaVerne (played by Georges Carpentier), a contender for the heavyweight championship. Although he needs to be concentrating all of his energies on the upcoming bout, Georges keeps getting distracted: Norine Lloyd, a society dame, has a distinct interest in him, but the interest is strictly one-sided. Georges prefers Sue, an old buddy and confidante. Gink has woman trouble of his own, as his flirtations do not sit at all well with Toots (played by Winnie Lightner), his erstwhile girl friend. More trouble arrives when Larkin, manager of current heavyweight champ Bob Morgan, appears at the camp with the goal of fixing the fight. He is sent packing, after which he attempts to slip a Mickey Finn to the challenger -- a plan which goes awry when Gink switches the drinks. Meanwhile, Gink, who is fighting in a preliminary in advance of the big fight, actually wins. Things don't look so bright for Georges, who initially gets the worst of it in his encounter with Morgan, but who eventually comes out on top.

When the picture was released in 1930, Bert Lahr, who had created the role of Gink on Broadway, strongly criticized the fact that Joe E. Brown had copied many of Lahr's mannerisms in the film. While the sound to the film, recorded on Vitaphone disks, still survives, it seems as if all film elements have been lost.

Cast (in credits order)

References

  1. ^ Morrison, William (1999) (trade paperback). Broadway Theatres: History and Architecture. Dover Books on Architecture. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications. pp. 162-163. ISBN 0-486-40244-4. 

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