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Roman Scandals

 
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Roman Scandals

  • Director: Frank Tuttle
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Slapstick
  • Main Cast: Eddie Cantor, Ruth Etting, Gloria Stuart, David Manners, Veree Teasdale
  • Release Year: 1933
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 91 minutes

Plot

Easily the best of Eddie Cantor's gargantuan musical comedies for producer Sam Goldwyn, Roman Scandals begins in the middle-America community of West Rome, where our hero Eddie (Cantor) is employed as a delivery boy. A self-styled authority of Ancient Roman history, Cantor bemoans the fact that the local shanty community is about to be wiped out by scheming politicians, certain that such an outrage could never have happened during Rome's Golden Days. After a blow on the head, Cantor wakes up in Imperial Rome, where he is sold on the slave auction block to good-natured tribune Josephus (David Manners). Cantor soon discovers that the evil emperor Valerius (Edward Arnold) is every bit a crook and grafter as the politicians in West Rome, and he intends to do something about it. He gets a job as food taster for Valerius -- a none-too-secure position, inasmuch as the emperor's wife Agrippa (Veree Teasdale) is constantly trying to poison her husband -- and does his best to smooth the path of romance for Josephus and recently captured princess Sylvia (Gloria Stuart). Cantor's well-intentioned interference earns him a session in the torture chamber, but he escapes and commandeers a chariot, setting the stage for a spectacular slapstick climax. On the verge of recapture, Cantor wakes to find himself in West Rome U.S.A. again, where he quickly foils the modern-day despots and brings about a happy ending for all his friends.

Co-written by George S. Kaufman, Robert E. Sherwood, George Oppenheimer and Arthur Sheekman (the soon-to-be husband of leading lady Gloria Stuart), Roman Scandals manages to get off a few clever satirical licks, but essentially it's a "lappy" lowbrow vehicle for Eddie Cantor, and in this it succeeds immensely. The Busby Berkeley-staged musical numbers, written by Harry Warren, Al Dubin and L. Wolfe Gilbert, must be seen to be believed: In "No More Love", Ruth Etting, playing the Emperor's cast-off mistress Olga, sings a plaintive torch song as dozens of enslaved Goldwyn Girls (including Lucille Ball and Barbara Pepper), wearing nothing but long, blonde wigs, are chained to a rotating pedestal; and in "Keep Young and Beautiful", these same maidens gleefully cavort around a Roman bathhouse in the near-altogether while Cantor, in blackface, hops about, rolls his eyes and claps his hands -- just before a jet of steam "shrinks" him, at which point he metamorphoses into midget Billy Barty! The quintessence of Depression-era escapism, Roman Scandals is must-see entertainment. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Edward Arnold - Emperor Valerius; Alan Mowbray - Majordomo; Grace Poggi - Slave Girl; Richard Alexander - Guard; Stanley Andrews - Official; Charles Arnt - Caius; Lucille Ball - Slave Girl; Bonnie Bannon; Billy Barty - Little Eddie; Stanley Blystone - Cop/Roman Jailer; Louise Carver - Lady Slave Bidder; Lane Chandler; Harry Cording; Jane Darwell - Beauty Salon Manager; Stanley Fields - Slave Auctioneer; Frank S. Hagney - Lucius Aide; Harry Holman - Mayor of West Rome; John Ince - Senator; Lee Kohlmar - Storekeeper; Marjorie Main; Michael Mark - Assistant Cook; Gigi Parrish; Barbara Pepper; Paul Porcasi - Chef; Willard Robertson - Warren F. Cooper; William Wagner - Slave Buyer; Leo Willis - Torturer; Charles Wilson - Police Chief Charles Pratt; Clarence H. Wilson - Buggs, museum keeper; Duke York - Soldier; Busby Berkeley; Francis Ford - Citizen; Jane Hamilton; Mary Lange; John Rutherford - Manius

Credit

Richard Day - Art Director, Busby Berkeley - Choreography, John W. Harkrider - Costume Designer, Frank Tuttle - Director, Stuart Heisler - Editor, Stuart Geisle - Editor, Alexis Dubin - Composer (Music Score), Alfred Newman - Composer (Music Score), Harry Warren - Composer (Music Score), Alfred Newman - Musical Direction/Supervision, Ray June - Cinematographer, Gregg Toland - Cinematographer, Samuel Goldwyn - Producer, Vinton Vernon - Sound/Sound Designer, Robert E. Sherwood - Screen Story, George Oppenheimer - Screenwriter, Nat Perrin - Screenwriter, Arthur Sheekman - Screenwriter, William Anthony McGuire - Screenwriter, George S. Kaufman - Short Story Author
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Wikipedia: Roman Scandals
Top
Roman Scandals (1933)
Directed by Frank Tuttle
Produced by Samuel Goldwyn
Written by William Anthony McGuire
based on the story by George Kaufman
Starring Eddie Cantor
Ruth Etting
Gloria Stuart
David Manners
Edward Arnold
Music by Alfred Newman
Cinematography Ray June
Greg Toland
Editing by Stuart Heiser
Studio The Samuel Goldwyn Company
Distributed by United Artists (1933)
Film Classics (1946)
Home Box Office Home Video (HBO) (1999)
MGM/UA Home Entertainment (2000)
Nelson Entertainment
Samuel Goldwyn Home Entertainment (1999)
Release date(s) USA (premiere):
25 December 1933
USA (official:
29 December 1933
Denmark:
16 April 1934
Finland:
7 October 1934
Denmark (re-release)
16 June 1959
Running time 93 minutes (original version)
85 minutes (edited version)
Country United States
Language English
Budget $1,000,000 (estimated)

Roman Scandals is a 1933 black and white American musical film starring Eddie Cantor, Ruth Etting, Gloria Stuart, Edward Arnold and David Manners. It was directed by Frank Tuttle.

The film features a number of intricate production numbers choreographed by Busby Berkeley. The song "Keep Young and Beautiful" is from this film. In addition to the starring actors in the picture, the elaborate dance numbers are performed by the "Goldwyn Girls", that in this film include Lucille Ball, Paulette Goddard, and Barbara Pepper.

Contents

Soundtrack

  • "Build a Little Home"
Music by Harry Warren
Lyrics by Al Dubin
Performed by Eddie Cantor and chorus
Reprised by Eddie Cantor and chorus
  • "No More Love"
Music by Harry Warren
Lyrics by Al Dubin
Sung by Ruth Etting
Danced by chorus
  • "Keep Young and Beautiful"
Music by Harry Warren
Lyrics by Al Dubin
Performed by Eddie Cantor with chorus
Danced by chorus
  • "Put a Tax on Love"
Music by Harry Warren
Lyrics by Al Dubin
Sung by Eddie Cantor
  • "All of Me"
Music by Gerald Marks
Lyrics by Seymour Simons
Sung by Eddie Cantor
  • "Dinah"
Music by Harry Akst
Lyrics by Sam Lewis and Joe Young
Sung by Eddie Cantor
  • "Kickin' the Gong Around"
Music by Harold Arlen
Lyrics by Ted Koehler
Sung by Eddie Cantor
  • "Turkey in the Straw"
Traditional
Played in the opening scene

Critical Response

  • A written media review is located at: In: Monthly Film Bulletin (UK), Vol. 1, Iss. 8, September 1934, (MG)

See also

External links



 
 
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