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I'll Be Yours

 
Movies:

I'll Be Yours

  • Director: William Seiter
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Musical
  • Movie Type: Musical Comedy
  • Themes: Fish Out of Water
  • Main Cast: Deanna Durbin, Tom Drake, William Bendix, Adolphe Menjou, Walter Catlett
  • Release Year: 1947
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 93 minutes

Plot

In this musical comedy, Louise Ginglebusher (Deanna Durbin) is a girl from a small town who comes top New York City with dreams of making it in show business. She gets her foot in the door in a roundabout way when she gets a job as an usherette at a prestigious movie palace run by tycoon J. Conrad Nelson (Adolphe Menjou). It soon becomes obvious that Nelson has eyes for his new hire, while Louise is more interested George Prescott (Tom Drake), a young lawyer looking to establish himself. Hoping to discourage Nelson while helping Prescott at the same time, Louise fibs and tells Nelson that Prescott is her husband, and could use a job within his organization. However, Louise's white lie turns out to have unexpected repercussions. Like any Deanna Durbin vehicle, I'll Be Yours features the star singing several tunes, including "Sari Waltz and "Granada"; two years after making this film, she would retire from the screen. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Cast

Franklin Pangborn - Barber; William Trenk - Captain; William Brooks - Stagedoor Johnny; Richard Abbott; Cyril Delevanti; Dudley Dickerson; Joan Fulton - Blonde; Joseph Granby; John Hamilton; Lorin Raker; Audrey Young - Usherette; Charles Miller

Credit

John B. Goodman - Art Director, Travis Banton - Costume Designer, William Seiter - Director, Otto Ludwig - Editor, Frank Skinner - Composer (Music Score), Walter Schumann - Musical Direction/Supervision, Jack Pierce - Makeup, Hal Mohr - Cinematographer, Felix Jackson - Producer, Russell A. Gausman - Set Designer, Preston Sturges - Screenwriter, Ferenc Molnar - Play Author
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I'll Be Yours

vhs cover
Directed by William A. Seiter
Produced by Felix Jackson
Written by Ferenc Molnár (play)
Jane Hinton (translation)
Preston Sturges (previous screenplay)
Feliz Johnson (adaptation)
Starring Deanna Durbin
Tom Drake
William Bendix
Adolphe Menjou
Music by Score:
Frank Skinner
Songs - Music:
Agustín Lara
Walter Schumann
Emmerich Kalman
Songs - Lyrics:
Agustín Lara
Jack Brook
Catherine Chisholm Cushing
E. P. Heath
Cinematography Hal Mohr
Editing by Otto Ludwig
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) 2 February 1947
Running time 93 minutes
Country United States
Language English

I'll Be Yours is a 1947 musical comedy film starring Deanna Durbin and directed by William A. Seiter. It was adapted by Felix Jackson from the screenplay for the 1935 non-musical film The Good Fairy by Preston Sturges, which was based on the play A jó tündér (The Good Fairy) by Ferenc Molnár as translated and adapted by Jane Hinton.

I'll Be Yours co-stars Tom Drake, William Bendix and Adolphe Menjou.


Contents

Plot

Louise Ginglebusher (Deanna Durbin) is a young woman from the small town of Cobbleskill who comes to New York City to make it in show business. In a café, she's befriended by a kindhearted but ornery waiter, Wechsberg (William Bendix), and meets a bearded struggling attorney, George Prescott (Tom Drake). She gets a job as an usherette from Mr. Buckingham (Walter Catlett), the owner of the prestigious Buckingham Music Hall, who's an old friend of her father.

While working at the Music Hall she meets Wechsberg again, and later when she is accosted by a masher, she gets rid of him by claiming that Wechsberg is her husband. Wechsberg then invites her to come with him the next night when he works at an upscale social gathering at the Savoy Ritz. Louise borrows a gown and comes to the party, where they get her past the headwaiter by claiming she's one of the entertainers. Mingling, she meets the host, J. Conrad Nelson (Adolphe Menjou), a philandering meat magnate, who requests that Louise sing a song. She does, so beautifully that Nelson offers to star her in a Broadway musical. To discourage Nelson's obvious physical interest in her, Louise tell him that she's married, whereupon Nelson offers buy her out of her marriage by paying her husband for his loss. Impetuously deciding to do a good deed, she gives Nelson the business card that George Prescott, the struggling lawyer, had given her, and tells him that George is her husband.

When Nelson visits George the next day in his shabby storefront law office, and offers to make him the legal representative for his company, George is suspicious and refuses the offer, but Nelson allays his concerns by telling the ethical young attorney that he needs an honest lawyer as a role model for his staff – the truth is he wants George on his staff so he can keep him occupied while he pursues Louise. Many complications ensue after Louise gets George to shave off his old-man's beard, revealing the handsome young man underneath, and a stroll in the moonlight provokes George to propose marriage to Louise.[1][2]

Cast


Cast notes:

  • Two years after making I'll Be Yours, Deanna Durbin retired from film acting.[2] In an interview in 1981, she described her last four films – this movie, Something in the Wind (1947), Up in Central Park (1948) and For the Love of Mary (1948) – as "terrible".[3]

Songs

I'll Be Yours was designed to be a vehicle for Deanna Durbin, and all the songs in it are sung by her.[4][5]

Production

I'll Be Yours was in production from the middle of August to the middle of October 1946.[6] Background scenes were shot on location in New York City.[3] It was released on 2 February 1947.[7] Among other taglines, it was marketed with "Heaven Protects the Working Girl...but who protects the guy she's WORKING to get?"[8]

Other versions and adaptations

Before being adapted by Preston Sturges for the 1935 film The Good Fairy, the Molnár play had been presented on Broadway with Helen Hayes playing "Lu" for 151 performances in 1931–1932,[9] with another production playing 68 performances later that year.[10] Preston Sturges used his screenplay for that earlier film as the basis for the 1951 Broadway musical Make a Wish, which had music and lyrics by Hugh Martin.[11]

On radio Lux Radio Theatre broadcast a radio adaptation of I'll be Yours, with William Bendix and Anne Blythe. For television, Hallmark Hall of Fame presented The Good Fairy on NBC in 1956, produced by Maurice Evans, directed by George Schaefer, and starring Julie Harris, Walter Slezak and Cyril Ritchard.[12]

Notes

External links



 
 

 

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