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A Day at the Races (film)

A Day at the Races is a 1937 American comedy film, and the seventh film starring the Marx Brothers (Groucho Marx, Harpo Marx and Chico Marx), with Allan Jones, Maureen O'Sullivan and Margaret Dumont. Like their previous Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer feature A Night at the Opera, this film was a major hit.[2]

A Day at the Races
Theatrical release poster
Directed bySam Wood
Written by
Screenplay by
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyJoseph Ruttenberg
Edited byFrank E. Hull
Music by
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • June 11, 1937 (1937-06-11)
Running time
109 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$2,016,000[1]
Box office$2,305,000[1]
The film's trailer

Plot Edit

The Standish Sanitarium, owned by Judy Standish, has fallen on hard times. Banker J.D. Morgan, who owns a nearby race track, hotel and nightclub, holds the mortgage on the sanitarium and is attempting to foreclose on it in order to convert the building into a casino. Tony, Judy's faithful employee, suggests asking financial help from the wealthy patient Mrs. Emily Upjohn, who is a hypochondriac, living at the sanitarium. After being pronounced healthy by the sanitarium's doctors, Mrs. Upjohn threatens to leave for treatment by Dr. Hugo Z. Hackenbush. Tony overhears her praise of Hackenbush, who is, unknown to her, a horse doctor. When Tony lies to Mrs. Upjohn, telling her that Hackenbush has been hired to run the Sanitarium, she is elated and informs Judy she will consider helping her financially. Tony contacts Hackenbush in Florida by telegram and when the Doctor arrives he immediately insults the Sanitarium's business manager Mr. Whitmore. Whitmore, being Morgan's stooge, is suspicious of Hackenbush's medical background.

Meanwhile, Judy's beau, singer Gil Stewart, who performs at Morgan's nightclub, has just spent his life savings on a racehorse named Hi-Hat. He hopes the horse, which he purchased from Morgan, will win a race and the money will allow Judy to save the Sanitarium. Hi-Hat is so afraid of Morgan, that he rears in fright whenever he hears his voice. Gil now has no money to pay for Hi-Hat's feed, and he, Tony and Stuffy, Hi-Hat's jockey, have to resort to trickery to fend off the Sheriff who has come to collect money for the feed bill. Tony raises some money by scamming Hackenbush in the "Tutsi Fruitsy Ice Cream" scene, giving him a tip on a horse, but all in code, so he has to buy book after book to decipher it.

Whitmore attempts to contact the Florida Medical Board for information on Dr. Hackenbush. Hackenbush intercepts the call, and by impersonating the man in charge of medical records, feigning a hurricane with an electric fan, pretending to forget what the call was about and repeatedly calling Whitmore to the dictagraph, he enrages Whitmore until he gives up. That night, at the gala Water Carnival, Gil performs along with Vivien Fay and her ballet, and Tony and Stuffy play the piano and harp respectively. Whitmore attempts to get Hackenbush fired by having Mrs. Upjohn catch him in his suite with Flo, a blonde temptress. Stuffy overhears the plot and informs Tony, so the two attempt to thwart Hackenbush's rendezvous with the floozy by posing as house detectives and then as paperhangers. When Whitmore and Mrs. Upjohn arrive, they have hidden Flo by stuffing her under the sofa cushions.

The following day, just as Hackenbush has convinced Mrs. Upjohn to sign an agreement to help Judy, Whitmore brings in the eminent Dr. Leopold X. Steinberg from Vienna, whom he hopes will reveal Hackenbush as a fraud. After Mrs. Upjohn agrees to an examination by Steinberg, Hackenbush wants to flee for fear of being exposed; Gil, Tony and Stuffy remind him that Judy still needs his help and persuade him to stay.

After making a shambles of Mrs. Upjohn's examination, Hackenbush, Tony, Stuffy and Gil hide out in Hi-Hat's stable, where Judy soon joins them. She is upset by the negative light of the situation; Gil tries to lift her spirits. Near the stable, Stuffy starts sympathizing with a community of poor black folk who believe him to be Archangel Gabriel. As the number progresses, Morgan, Whitmore and the Sheriff arrive and Hackenbush, Tony and Stuffy try to disguise themselves by painting their faces with grease in blackface. The attempt fails, everybody runs off and Whitmore finally exposes Hackenbush as a horse doctor with a letter he received from the Florida Medical Board. Hi-Hat hears Morgan's voice and bolts, easily jumping over several obstacles in the way. Judy suggests to Gil that Hi-Hat is a jumper and Gil enters him into the upcoming steeplechase race.

Morgan, who witnessed Hi-Hat's jumping prowess the night before, tries to prevent him from being entered in the race but fails. Knowing that Hi-Hat is afraid of Morgan, everyone works to make Hi-Hat aware of his presence before reaching the fence.[3][4][5] On the last lap, Hi-Hat and Morgan's horse wipe out; when they reach the finish line, it appears that Morgan's horse has won. Stuffy realizes that the mud-covered horses were switched after the accident, and Morgan's jockey was riding Hi-Hat in the finish, thus making Hi-Hat the winner. The black folk, who have all bet on Hi-Hat, arrive and start walking with Gil, Judy, Hackenbush, Tony and Stuffy through the racetrack, all singing the final number.

Cast Edit

Production Edit

 
The Marx Brothers on the set with director Sam Wood

The film went through numerous outlines, treatments, drafts, revisions and a total of eighteen different scripts before arriving at its final version. A major portion of the final screenplay was written by Al Boasberg who also contributed to A Night at the Opera, but due to a bitter disagreement with MGM, he chose not to be given any credit for his work. As they had with A Night at the Opera, the Brothers honed the comic material during a pre-production vaudeville tour.

Groucho's character was originally named "Quackenbush" but was changed to "Hackenbush" over threats of lawsuits by several real doctors actually named Quackenbush.[citation needed] In My Life with Groucho: A Son's Eye View, Arthur Marx relates that in his later years, Groucho increasingly referred to himself by the name Hackenbush.[8]

During production, Irving Thalberg, who had brought the Marx Brothers to MGM in 1934, died suddenly in September, 1936 of pneumonia at the age of 37. Thalberg's death left the Marxes without a champion at MGM, and the studio never gave the same level of care and attention to the team they had received under Thalberg. As a result, the Marx Brothers' three later MGM films are generally considered to be vastly inferior to the first two produced by Thalberg.[9]

The original release of A Day at the Races presented the water carnival sequence in light brown sepia and the ballet scene with a blue tint.[10]

Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, California was used as a filming location for some of the racetrack scenes.[11]

Music Edit

The songs in the film, by Bronislaw Kaper, Walter Jurmann, and Gus Kahn, are "On Blue Venetian Waters", "Tomorrow Is Another Day", and "All God's Chillun Got Rhythm" (featuring Ivie Anderson from Duke Ellington's orchestra). Two other songs were slated for the film, but ultimately cut . One, "Dr. Hackenbush", sung by Groucho about "what a great doctor he is" ("No matter what I treat them for they die from something else") was performed on the pre-filming tour, but was apparently never shot; Groucho later recorded the song separately. The other, "A Message From The Man In The Moon", sung by Allan Jones, was shot, but was cut at the last minute because the film was too long. The melody is heard during the opening titles, as some incidental music during the Water Carnival scene, and is "reprised" by Groucho during the final scene. The DVD release of the film includes a rediscovered audio recording for the film soundtrack of the song, performed by Allan Jones.

The film's lindy hop dance sequence is set to the tune of "All God's Chillun Got Rhythm", and featuring Whitey's Lindy Hoppers, including Willamae Ricker, Snookie Beasley, Ella Gibson, George Greenidge, Dot Miller, Johnny Innis, Norma Miller and Leon James.[12]

"Cosi-Cosa", a song sung by Allan Jones in A Night at the Opera, makes an instrumental cameo at the opening of the climactic racetrack scene. The tune would be heard again in the Marxes final MGM film, The Big Store (1941).

Musical numbers Edit

Reception Edit

 
Colorized publicity shot featuring Harpo and Chico.

Contemporary reviews from critics continued to be positive for the Marx Brothers through their seventh film. John T. McManus of The New York Times called it "comparatively bad Marx," although still deserving of "a much better than passing grade" because "any Marx brothers motion picture is an improvement upon almost any other sustained screen slapstick."[13] Variety declared, "Surefire film fun and up to the usual parity of the madcap Marxes."[14] Harrison's Reports wrote, "Very good! The Marx Brothers are at their best and funniest here."[15] John Mosher of The New Yorker was also positive, writing that "Groucho, Harpo, and Chico are in full blast again," and the film "reaches a fever pitch even beyond earlier records."[16] The Chicago Tribune called it a "ridiculous farce, plummed with unique gags, laugh provoking situations, fast action ... The finale sends audiences away grinning and happy."[17]

Writing for Night and Day magazine of London, Graham Greene gave the film a generally good review, summarizing it as "easily the best film to be seen in London", but he criticized some elements of the film's portrayal. Greene observed that the film gave him "a nostalgia for the old cheap rickety sets" rather than the realistic sets, and although he praised Harpo's performance as "shin[ing] the brightest", he complained that the strong realism in O'Sullivan's acting set up a strong juxtaposition against the "silliness" of the Marx brothers' antics.[18]

The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists:

— Nominated[20]

According to MGM records, the film earned $1,602,000 domestically and $703,000 foreign, but because of its high cost recorded a loss of $543,000.[1]

Awards Edit

The dance sequence for "All God's Chillun Got Rhythm" was nominated for the short-lived Academy Award for Best Dance Direction, only given from 1935 to 1937.[21]

In popular culture Edit

British rock band Queen named their 1976 studio album after the film. Their 1975 studio album was named after A Night at the Opera, the Marx Brothers' previous film. Groucho sent a handwritten note to the band, congratulating them on their excellent taste.[22]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c The Eddie Mannix Ledger, Los Angeles: Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study.
  2. ^ Giddins, Gary (June 18, 2000). "There Ain't No Sanity Claus". The New York Times. Retrieved March 3, 2010.
  3. ^ Tinee, Mae (July 3, 1937). "Marx Brothers Go Fast Pace in 'Day at Races'". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. 9. Retrieved March 3, 2010.
  4. ^ Schallert, Edwin (June 17, 1937). "Marx Brothers Run Riot In "A Day At The Races"". Los Angeles Times. p. A15. Retrieved March 3, 2010.
  5. ^ "Full synopsis" at TCM.com
  6. ^ Bill Crow From Birdland to Broadway: Scenes from a Jazz Life, New York: Oxford University Press, 1992 [1993], p. 24
  7. ^ Nemerov, Alexander (2005). Icons of Grief: Val Lewton's Home Front Pictures. University of California Press. pp. 97–99. ISBN 978-0520241008.
  8. ^ Marx, Arthur (June 1991). My Life with Groucho: A Son's Eye View. Robson Book Ltd. ISBN 978-0-86051-494-7.
  9. ^ Thames, Stephanie. "The Big Store" on TCM.com
  10. ^ "A Day at the Races". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved August 27, 2016.
  11. ^ . movie-locations.com. Archived from the original on 7 April 2019. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  12. ^ Manning, Frankie; Millman, Cynthia, Cynthia (2007). Frankie Manning: Ambassador of Lindy Hop. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Temple University Press.
  13. ^ The New York Times Film Reviews, Volume 2: 1932-1938. The New York Times & Arno Press. 1970. p. 1402.
  14. ^ "Film Reviews". Variety. New York: Variety, Inc.: 12 June 23, 1937.
  15. ^ "A Day at the Races". Harrison's Reports. New York: Harrison's Reports, Inc.: 103 June 26, 1937.
  16. ^ Mosher, John (June 19, 1937). "The Current Cinema". The New Yorker. New York: F-R Publishing Corp. p. 79.
  17. ^ "Marx Brothers Go Fast Pace in 'Day at the Races'". Chicago Daily Tribune. Chicago: Chicago Daily Tribune: 9. July 3, 1937.
  18. ^ Greene, Graham (12 August 1937). "A Day at the Races/King Solomon's Mines". Night and Day.
    Reprinted in: Taylor, John Russell, ed. (1980). The Pleasure Dome. Oxford University Press. pp. 160–161. ISBN 0192812866.
  19. ^ "AFI's 100 Years...100 Laughs" (PDF). American Film Institute. Retrieved 2016-08-08.
  20. ^ "AFI's 100 Years...100 Movie Quotes Nominees" (PDF). Retrieved 2016-08-08.
  21. ^ A Day at the Races - Awards at IMDb
  22. ^ A Day At The Races’: How Queen Scored Pole Position at discovermusic

Further reading Edit

  • Buxbaum, Elisabeth (2006). Veronika, der Lenz ist da. Walter Jurmann – Ein Musiker zwischen den Welten und Zeiten. Mit einem Werkverzeichnis von Alexander Sieghardt. Vienna: Edition Steinbauer., ISBN 3-902494-18-2.
  • Green, Stanley (1999). Hollywood Musicals Year by Year (2nd ed.). Hal Leonard Corporation. ISBN 0-634-00765-3. p. 70.

External links Edit

races, film, races, 1937, american, comedy, film, seventh, film, starring, marx, brothers, groucho, marx, harpo, marx, chico, marx, with, allan, jones, maureen, sullivan, margaret, dumont, like, their, previous, metro, goldwyn, mayer, feature, night, opera, th. A Day at the Races is a 1937 American comedy film and the seventh film starring the Marx Brothers Groucho Marx Harpo Marx and Chico Marx with Allan Jones Maureen O Sullivan and Margaret Dumont Like their previous Metro Goldwyn Mayer feature A Night at the Opera this film was a major hit 2 A Day at the RacesTheatrical release posterDirected bySam WoodWritten byRobert Pirosh George Seaton George OppenheimerScreenplay byAl Boasberg uncredited Leon Gordon uncredited George S Kaufman Carey WilsonProduced bySam Wood Irving Thalberg uncredited Lawrence Weingarten uncredited StarringGroucho Marx Harpo Marx Chico Marx Allan Jones Maureen O Sullivan Margaret DumontCinematographyJoseph RuttenbergEdited byFrank E HullMusic byWalter Jurmann Bronislau Kaper Franz WaxmanDistributed byMetro Goldwyn MayerRelease dateJune 11 1937 1937 06 11 Running time109 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 2 016 000 1 Box office 2 305 000 1 source source source source The film s trailer Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Music 4 1 Musical numbers 5 Reception 6 Awards 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksPlot EditThe Standish Sanitarium owned by Judy Standish has fallen on hard times Banker J D Morgan who owns a nearby race track hotel and nightclub holds the mortgage on the sanitarium and is attempting to foreclose on it in order to convert the building into a casino Tony Judy s faithful employee suggests asking financial help from the wealthy patient Mrs Emily Upjohn who is a hypochondriac living at the sanitarium After being pronounced healthy by the sanitarium s doctors Mrs Upjohn threatens to leave for treatment by Dr Hugo Z Hackenbush Tony overhears her praise of Hackenbush who is unknown to her a horse doctor When Tony lies to Mrs Upjohn telling her that Hackenbush has been hired to run the Sanitarium she is elated and informs Judy she will consider helping her financially Tony contacts Hackenbush in Florida by telegram and when the Doctor arrives he immediately insults the Sanitarium s business manager Mr Whitmore Whitmore being Morgan s stooge is suspicious of Hackenbush s medical background Meanwhile Judy s beau singer Gil Stewart who performs at Morgan s nightclub has just spent his life savings on a racehorse named Hi Hat He hopes the horse which he purchased from Morgan will win a race and the money will allow Judy to save the Sanitarium Hi Hat is so afraid of Morgan that he rears in fright whenever he hears his voice Gil now has no money to pay for Hi Hat s feed and he Tony and Stuffy Hi Hat s jockey have to resort to trickery to fend off the Sheriff who has come to collect money for the feed bill Tony raises some money by scamming Hackenbush in the Tutsi Fruitsy Ice Cream scene giving him a tip on a horse but all in code so he has to buy book after book to decipher it Whitmore attempts to contact the Florida Medical Board for information on Dr Hackenbush Hackenbush intercepts the call and by impersonating the man in charge of medical records feigning a hurricane with an electric fan pretending to forget what the call was about and repeatedly calling Whitmore to the dictagraph he enrages Whitmore until he gives up That night at the gala Water Carnival Gil performs along with Vivien Fay and her ballet and Tony and Stuffy play the piano and harp respectively Whitmore attempts to get Hackenbush fired by having Mrs Upjohn catch him in his suite with Flo a blonde temptress Stuffy overhears the plot and informs Tony so the two attempt to thwart Hackenbush s rendezvous with the floozy by posing as house detectives and then as paperhangers When Whitmore and Mrs Upjohn arrive they have hidden Flo by stuffing her under the sofa cushions The following day just as Hackenbush has convinced Mrs Upjohn to sign an agreement to help Judy Whitmore brings in the eminent Dr Leopold X Steinberg from Vienna whom he hopes will reveal Hackenbush as a fraud After Mrs Upjohn agrees to an examination by Steinberg Hackenbush wants to flee for fear of being exposed Gil Tony and Stuffy remind him that Judy still needs his help and persuade him to stay After making a shambles of Mrs Upjohn s examination Hackenbush Tony Stuffy and Gil hide out in Hi Hat s stable where Judy soon joins them She is upset by the negative light of the situation Gil tries to lift her spirits Near the stable Stuffy starts sympathizing with a community of poor black folk who believe him to be Archangel Gabriel As the number progresses Morgan Whitmore and the Sheriff arrive and Hackenbush Tony and Stuffy try to disguise themselves by painting their faces with grease in blackface The attempt fails everybody runs off and Whitmore finally exposes Hackenbush as a horse doctor with a letter he received from the Florida Medical Board Hi Hat hears Morgan s voice and bolts easily jumping over several obstacles in the way Judy suggests to Gil that Hi Hat is a jumper and Gil enters him into the upcoming steeplechase race Morgan who witnessed Hi Hat s jumping prowess the night before tries to prevent him from being entered in the race but fails Knowing that Hi Hat is afraid of Morgan everyone works to make Hi Hat aware of his presence before reaching the fence 3 4 5 On the last lap Hi Hat and Morgan s horse wipe out when they reach the finish line it appears that Morgan s horse has won Stuffy realizes that the mud covered horses were switched after the accident and Morgan s jockey was riding Hi Hat in the finish thus making Hi Hat the winner The black folk who have all bet on Hi Hat arrive and start walking with Gil Judy Hackenbush Tony and Stuffy through the racetrack all singing the final number Cast EditGroucho Marx as Dr Hugo Z Hackenbush Chico Marx as Tony Harpo Marx as Stuffy Allan Jones as Gil Stewart Maureen O Sullivan as Judy Standish Margaret Dumont as Emily Upjohn Leonard Ceeley citation needed as Whitmore Douglass Dumbrille as J D Morgan Esther Muir as Flo Sig Ruman as Dr Leopold X Steinberg credited as Sig Rumann Robert Middlemass as Sheriff Vivien Fay citation needed as specialty dancer Ivie Anderson as specialty singer in number All God s Chillun Got Rhythm 6 Richard Farnsworth appears uncredited as a jockey Darby Jones appears in an uncredited role as a trumpet player during the All God s Chillun Got Rhythm number 7 Production Edit nbsp The Marx Brothers on the set with director Sam WoodThe film went through numerous outlines treatments drafts revisions and a total of eighteen different scripts before arriving at its final version A major portion of the final screenplay was written by Al Boasberg who also contributed to A Night at the Opera but due to a bitter disagreement with MGM he chose not to be given any credit for his work As they had with A Night at the Opera the Brothers honed the comic material during a pre production vaudeville tour Groucho s character was originally named Quackenbush but was changed to Hackenbush over threats of lawsuits by several real doctors actually named Quackenbush citation needed In My Life with Groucho A Son s Eye View Arthur Marx relates that in his later years Groucho increasingly referred to himself by the name Hackenbush 8 During production Irving Thalberg who had brought the Marx Brothers to MGM in 1934 died suddenly in September 1936 of pneumonia at the age of 37 Thalberg s death left the Marxes without a champion at MGM and the studio never gave the same level of care and attention to the team they had received under Thalberg As a result the Marx Brothers three later MGM films are generally considered to be vastly inferior to the first two produced by Thalberg 9 The original release of A Day at the Races presented the water carnival sequence in light brown sepia and the ballet scene with a blue tint 10 Santa Anita Park in Arcadia California was used as a filming location for some of the racetrack scenes 11 Music EditThe songs in the film by Bronislaw Kaper Walter Jurmann and Gus Kahn are On Blue Venetian Waters Tomorrow Is Another Day and All God s Chillun Got Rhythm featuring Ivie Anderson from Duke Ellington s orchestra Two other songs were slated for the film but ultimately cut One Dr Hackenbush sung by Groucho about what a great doctor he is No matter what I treat them for they die from something else was performed on the pre filming tour but was apparently never shot Groucho later recorded the song separately The other A Message From The Man In The Moon sung by Allan Jones was shot but was cut at the last minute because the film was too long The melody is heard during the opening titles as some incidental music during the Water Carnival scene and is reprised by Groucho during the final scene The DVD release of the film includes a rediscovered audio recording for the film soundtrack of the song performed by Allan Jones The film s lindy hop dance sequence is set to the tune of All God s Chillun Got Rhythm and featuring Whitey s Lindy Hoppers including Willamae Ricker Snookie Beasley Ella Gibson George Greenidge Dot Miller Johnny Innis Norma Miller and Leon James 12 Cosi Cosa a song sung by Allan Jones in A Night at the Opera makes an instrumental cameo at the opening of the climactic racetrack scene The tune would be heard again in the Marxes final MGM film The Big Store 1941 Musical numbers Edit On Blue Venetian Waters Tomorrow Is Another Day Gabriel Who Dat Man All God s Chillun Got Rhythm Nobody Knows the Trouble I ve Seen A Message from the Man in the Moon Reception Edit nbsp Colorized publicity shot featuring Harpo and Chico Contemporary reviews from critics continued to be positive for the Marx Brothers through their seventh film John T McManus of The New York Times called it comparatively bad Marx although still deserving of a much better than passing grade because any Marx brothers motion picture is an improvement upon almost any other sustained screen slapstick 13 Variety declared Surefire film fun and up to the usual parity of the madcap Marxes 14 Harrison s Reports wrote Very good The Marx Brothers are at their best and funniest here 15 John Mosher of The New Yorker was also positive writing that Groucho Harpo and Chico are in full blast again and the film reaches a fever pitch even beyond earlier records 16 The Chicago Tribune called it a ridiculous farce plummed with unique gags laugh provoking situations fast action The finale sends audiences away grinning and happy 17 Writing for Night and Day magazine of London Graham Greene gave the film a generally good review summarizing it as easily the best film to be seen in London but he criticized some elements of the film s portrayal Greene observed that the film gave him a nostalgia for the old cheap rickety sets rather than the realistic sets and although he praised Harpo s performance as shin ing the brightest he complained that the strong realism in O Sullivan s acting set up a strong juxtaposition against the silliness of the Marx brothers antics 18 The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists 2000 AFI s 100 Years 100 Laughs 59 19 2005 AFI s 100 Years 100 Movie Quotes Flo Marlowe Oh hold me closer Closer Closer Dr Hugo Z Hackenbush If I hold you any closer I ll be in back of you Nominated 20 dd According to MGM records the film earned 1 602 000 domestically and 703 000 foreign but because of its high cost recorded a loss of 543 000 1 Awards EditThe dance sequence for All God s Chillun Got Rhythm was nominated for the short lived Academy Award for Best Dance Direction only given from 1935 to 1937 21 In popular culture EditBritish rock band Queen named their 1976 studio album after the film Their 1975 studio album was named after A Night at the Opera the Marx Brothers previous film Groucho sent a handwritten note to the band congratulating them on their excellent taste 22 See also EditList of films about horse racingReferences Edit a b c The Eddie Mannix Ledger Los Angeles Margaret Herrick Library Center for Motion Picture Study Giddins Gary June 18 2000 There Ain t No Sanity Claus The New York Times Retrieved March 3 2010 Tinee Mae July 3 1937 Marx Brothers Go Fast Pace in Day at Races Chicago Daily Tribune p 9 Retrieved March 3 2010 Schallert Edwin June 17 1937 Marx Brothers Run Riot In A Day At The Races Los Angeles Times p A15 Retrieved March 3 2010 Full synopsis at TCM com Bill Crow From Birdland to Broadway Scenes from a Jazz Life New York Oxford University Press 1992 1993 p 24 Nemerov Alexander 2005 Icons of Grief Val Lewton s Home Front Pictures University of California Press pp 97 99 ISBN 978 0520241008 Marx Arthur June 1991 My Life with Groucho A Son s Eye View Robson Book Ltd ISBN 978 0 86051 494 7 Thames Stephanie The Big Store on TCM com A Day at the Races Turner Classic Movies Retrieved August 27 2016 A Day At The Races 1937 movie locations com Archived from the original on 7 April 2019 Retrieved 7 April 2019 Manning Frankie Millman Cynthia Cynthia 2007 Frankie Manning Ambassador of Lindy Hop Philadelphia Pennsylvania Temple University Press The New York Times Film Reviews Volume 2 1932 1938 The New York Times amp Arno Press 1970 p 1402 Film Reviews Variety New York Variety Inc 12 June 23 1937 A Day at the Races Harrison s Reports New York Harrison s Reports Inc 103 June 26 1937 Mosher John June 19 1937 The Current Cinema The New Yorker New York F R Publishing Corp p 79 Marx Brothers Go Fast Pace in Day at the Races Chicago Daily Tribune Chicago Chicago Daily Tribune 9 July 3 1937 Greene Graham 12 August 1937 A Day at the Races King Solomon s Mines Night and Day Reprinted in Taylor John Russell ed 1980 The Pleasure Dome Oxford University Press pp 160 161 ISBN 0192812866 AFI s 100 Years 100 Laughs PDF American Film Institute Retrieved 2016 08 08 AFI s 100 Years 100 Movie Quotes Nominees PDF Retrieved 2016 08 08 A Day at the Races Awards at IMDb A Day At The Races How Queen Scored Pole Position at discovermusicFurther reading EditBuxbaum Elisabeth 2006 Veronika der Lenz ist da Walter Jurmann Ein Musiker zwischen den Welten und Zeiten Mit einem Werkverzeichnis von Alexander Sieghardt Vienna Edition Steinbauer ISBN 3 902494 18 2 Green Stanley 1999 Hollywood Musicals Year by Year 2nd ed Hal Leonard Corporation ISBN 0 634 00765 3 p 70 External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to A Day at the Races film nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to A Day at the Races A Day at the Races at IMDb A Day at the Races at AllMovie A Day at the Races at the TCM Movie Database A Day at the Races at the American Film Institute Catalog Full description of A Day at the Races from Filmsite org The Marx Brothers Council Podcast episode discussing A Day at the Races Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A Day at the Races film amp oldid 1176962888, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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