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Let's Be Happy

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Let's Be Happy
Original three sheet poster
Directed byHenry Levin
Written byDorothy Cooper
Screenplay byDiana Morgan (screenwriter)
Based onJeannie(1940 play)
byAimée Stuart
Produced byMarcel Hellman
StarringVera-Ellen
Tony Martin
Robert Flemyng
CinematographyErwin Hillier
Edited byEdward B. Jarvis
Music byNicholas Brodszky
Angela Morley
Production
companies
Distributed byAssociated British-Pathé[2]
[3]
Release date
  • 9 May 1957(1957-05-09)
[4]
Running time
107 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Let's Be Happyis aTechnicolor1957 Britishmusical filmstarringTony Martin,Vera-EllenandRobert Flemyngand directed byHenry Levin.[1]It was written by Dorothy Cooper andDiana MorganinCinemaScope.This film was an updated remake ofJeannie(1941), starringBarbara Mullen,which itself was based on the stage playJeanniebyAimée Stuart.[4]

The film was Vera-Ellen's final film; she later withdrew from public life after the death of her daughter, Victoria Ellen Rothschild.[5]The film is also Tony Martin's final appearance in a movie musical, although he later made a cameo appearance inDear Mr. Wonderful,a 1982 film.[6]

Let's Be Happypremiered in London on 9 May 1957.[4]

Plot

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Jeannie McLean is 28 and lives in ruralVermont.Inheriting a few thousand dollars from her Scottish-born grandfather she was looking after in his old age, she decides to travel to Scotland to see her ancestral country.

On the journey by air and train, Jeannie finds herself continuously near Stanley Smith, a brash washing-machine salesman from Idaho. Having been closely monitored and controlled by her grandfather, she's hesitant to accept his help. However, Jeannie ends up asking for Stanley's aid a few times. His extroverted ways help her through various difficulties such as experiencing turbulence without becoming too nervous, getting through customs and getting seated in the dining car.

Jeannie finally reachesEdinburgh(duringthe Festival). Losing her room she'd expected to have in a boarding house, she seeks Stanley in his hotel. As he's sorting out her room, the impoverished landowner Lord James MacNairn, who has overheard them talking and believes that she is wealthy, introduces himself.

When Jeannie catches out Stanley in a lie, taking out a red-headed model to dinner instead of her as agreed, she breaks off their friendship and accepts James' attentions. After they sightsee in Edinburgh, Jeannie gets herself spruced up in a beauty salon, then splurges on a designer gown.

Stanley still follows her around, with the pretty French redhead in tow, including taking seats right behind James and Jeannie at the ballet, and inviting them to join him and the model in a restaurant. However, still sore at him, she disregards his invitation.

James takes Jeannie to seeLoch Lomond,then to a family wedding of her distant relative and finally to his family home - a huge castle. However, he is restricted to a very small wing of the castle with his housekeeper Miss Cathie, and the rest of the building is open to the public.

James asks Jeannie to marry him, but before she can answer him Stanley approaches them. She tells him she's engaged and he leaves upset. When James learns that she has spent all her inheritance which was only a few thousand, he confesses he originally wanted her for her money but now really does love her. However, now knowing that he is needing someone with money, she turns him down.

Jeannie returns home to Vermont, but Stanley, having made a major sales coup, tracks her down. After declaring his love, he proposes and she accepts.

Cast

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Production

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Location filming took place inEdinburghand other locations in Scotland,Paris,andThirlestane Castlewhich serves as Lord James' country house.[7]

References

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  1. ^ab"Let's Be Happy".BFI.Archived fromthe originalon 22 February 2020.Retrieved26 May2022.
  2. ^Holmes, Su (2005).British Tv & Film Culture in the 1950s: Coming to a TVv Near You.Bristol UK & Portland, Oregon: Intellect. p. 227.
  3. ^Let's Be Happyat theAFI Catalog of Feature Films
  4. ^abc"Let's Be Happy - Stylish Strictly showgirl pop art by Art & Hue".Art & Hue.
  5. ^Lobosco, David (21 December 2012)."A TRIP DOWN MEMORY LANE: VERA-ELLEN: THE LATER YEARS".A TRIP DOWN MEMORY LANE.Retrieved6 December2018.
  6. ^Maslin, Janet (21 December 1983)."Lilienthal's 'Mr. Wonderful'"– via NYTimes.
  7. ^"Let's Be Happy".REELSTREETS.Retrieved13 May2021.
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