Hollywood Party(1934 film)

Hollywood Party,also known under its working title ofThe Hollywood Revue of 1933andStar Spangled Banquet,[1][2]is a 1934 Americanpre-Codemusical filmstarringLaurel and Hardy,The Three Stooges,Jimmy Durante,Lupe VélezandMickey Mouse(voiced by an uncreditedWalt Disney). It was distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer.Each sequence featured a different star with a separate scriptwriter and director assigned.

Hollywood Party
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Written by
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyJames Wong Howe
Edited byGeorge Boemler
Music by
Production
companies
Distributed byLoew's Inc.
Release date
  • June 1, 1934(1934-06-01)(US)
Running time
75 minutes (original)
68 minutes (existing)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

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Jungle movie star "Schnarzan", a character in parody of Tarzan, is advised by his manager that he needs new lions for his pictures, as his old ones are "worn out". At a wild Hollywood party we see various guests, including a "lion provider". After it all gets out of hand, Schnarzan awakens to find he is just plain old Durante, who had a strange dream.[3]

Laurel and Hardy arrive late in the picture. Schnarzan's screen rival Baron Munchausen has given them a bad check for the lions they provided, and they are seeking reimbursement. Instead, they get into an egg-smashing contest with the fiery Lupe Velez.

Live action cast

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Laurel and HardywithLupe Vélezin a scene from the movie

Uncredited cast

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Voice cast

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Production background

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During production the movie was known asThe Hollywood Revue of 1933andStar Spangled Banquet.[1]It was originally intended as an all-star attraction, like the studio's successfulThe Hollywood Revue of 1929produced byHarry Rapf.Rapf's 1933 revue would starJean Harlow,Joan Crawford,Marie Dressler,andLee Tracy,supported by studio comediansJimmy Durante,Lupe Vélez,Charles Butterworth,andJack Pearl.After a series of expensive rewrites and revisions, with numerous directors taking a hand in the filming, only the comedians remained, withPolly Moran,George Givot,andTed Healyand his(Three) Stoogesaugmenting the cast.Laurel and Hardywere borrowed from producerHal Roachto appear in the final section of the film. The revue format was abandoned, and the film became a farcical comedy with music.

It has been asserted thatAllan Dwan,Edmund Goulding,Russell Mack,Charles Reisner,Roy RowlandandSam Wooddirected various scenes, with the overwhelming majority directed byRichard Boleslavsky.[4]George Stevensdirected the Laurel and Hardy sequence[4]and Dave Gould directed the "Feelin' High" dance number with choreography by Georgie Hale. Seymour Felix and Eddie Prinz directed final reshoots.[5][6]Around the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer backlot, the choreographers of the dance sequences were competing with those staging the MGM movieDancing Lady,vying to see who could create the most elaborate dance number.[7]

The movie had many sequences cut or reshot after several references proved too esoteric for foreign audiences. A sequence that had featuredThelma Todd(impersonatingMae West),Lupe Vélez,Jimmy Durante,andZaSu Pittsplaying bridge was deleted after it was lost on British viewers not yet familiar with the game.[6]Additional episodes that featured actorsHerman Bing,Johnny Weissmuller,Jackie Cooper,andMax Baerwere cut from the movie. As a result, surviving prints run approximately 68 minutes, but the original run time was 75 minutes. Famed songwritersRodgers and Hartcontributed most of the music.[4]Gus Kahnwrote "Moonlight Serenade" for the 1933Busby BerkeleymovieFootlight Parade.However, when that song was cut from theWarner Bros.picture, it was placed a year later inHollywood Partyand sung byEddie Quillan.[8]

Reception

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Critical reception forHollywood Partyupon its original release was largely negative.[2]Multiple exhibitors wrote in to theMotion Picture Heraldto express their disgust with the movie, and one theater manager from Kentucky called it "One of the poorest excuses for a picture we have ever played".[9]The New York Timeswrote that it "may have been very funny while it was being made, but as it comes to the screen it is not a little disappointing".[10]

The film's chaotic, patchwork structure didn't appeal to general audiences.Hollywood Partyremains significant today for its comedy stars, including Laurel and Hardy, radio celebrity Jack Pearl, The Three Stooges (in their final appearance for MGM, written byArthur Kober[11]), and Mickey Mouse. The Mickey Mouse sequence introduces aTechnicolorcartoon,The Hot Choc-late Soldiers,created byWalt Disneywith music byNacio Herb Brown,and lyrics byArthur Freed.

The studio regardedHollywood Partyas such an embarrassment that no director claimed screen credit, and the technical credits were crowded onto a single panel and only disclosed after the end title. The film was a box office disaster, posting a loss of $500,000 inDepressiondollars.[12]It was producer Harry Rapf's last attempt to stage an expensive revue – or any expensive project at all. The failure ofHollywood Partyresulted in Rapf being transferred to MGM's short-subjects department, but he acquitted himself well enough there to return to low-budget feature productions, which he produced until his death in 1949.

Hollywood Partydid recoup some of its losses later. Hal Roach had discontinued his releasing arrangement with MGM in 1938, so MGM would have no further Laurel and Hardy comedies to offer exhibitors. The studio filled the void with a reissue ofHollywood Partyin 1939. Its crazy-quilt approach could now pass for a "screwball" comedy, and its cast of Jimmy Durante, Lupe Vélez, and The Three Stooges now had more name value.[13]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abVariety, March 13, 1934.
  2. ^abKaufman, J.B. (June 1993). "Before Snow White".Film History.5(2): 164–172.JSTOR27670718.
  3. ^"Hollywood Party".RetrievedMay 19,2024.
  4. ^abcVariety, March 29, 1934
  5. ^Variety, November 18, 1933
  6. ^abVariety, February 22, 1934
  7. ^Variety, October 31, 1933
  8. ^Variety, August 22, 1933
  9. ^Jenkins, Henry (1992).What Made Pistachio Nuts?: Early Sound Comedy and the Vaudeville Aesthetic.Columbia University Press. pp. 110–132.ISBN9780231078559.Retrieved4 June2015.
  10. ^"Hollywood Party (1934)".The New York Times.May 26, 1934.RetrievedJune 4,2015.
  11. ^Variety, October 12, 1933
  12. ^Richard Barrios,A Song on the Dark,Oxford University Press, 2010, p. 405.
  13. ^Scott MacGillivray,Laurel & Hardy From the Forties Forward,Second Edition, iUniverse, 2009, p.47.
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