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Hellzapoppin' (film)

Hellzapoppin' is a 1941 American musical comedy film, and an adaptation of the stage musical of the same name that ran on Broadway from 1938 to 1941. The film is directed by H. C. Potter and distributed by Universal Pictures.[2] Although the entire Broadway cast was initially slated to feature in the film,[3] the only performers from the stage production to appear in the film were lead actors Ole Olsen and Chic Johnson, and the specialty act Whitey's Lindy Hoppers.

Hellzapoppin'
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Written by
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyElwood Bredell
Edited by
Music by
  • Frank Skinner
  • Ted Cain
  • Charles Previn
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release dates
  • December 25, 1941 (1941-12-25) (Premiere)
  • December 26, 1941 (1941-12-26)
Running time
84 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1.7 million (US rentals)[1]

Alongside Olsen and Johnson, both of whom produced and starred in the Broadway musical, the cast of Hellzapoppin' includes Martha Raye, Mischa Auer, Shemp Howard, and the musical duo Slim & Slam. The film is deliberately nonsensical, with the comedians stopping the film to address both the movie audience and the projection booth (breaking the fourth wall); trick photography embellishing the visual gags; and the traditional romantic subplot ridiculed as it unfolds.

Plot

Shemp Howard begins the film as Louie, the projectionist of the Universal Theatre, exhibiting a musical pageant of chorus girls promenading down a staircase. The staircase collapses and turns into a slide, conveying the dancers straight to hell, where they are tortured by demons. Ole Olsen and Chic Johnson (playing themselves) arrive in the midst of the mayhem by taxi and after a series of pranks, step back to reveal that they are on a movie soundstage.

They are hounded by the film's director (Richard Lane), who tries to explain that their wild comedy won't work in movies. Mousy screenwriter Harry Selby (Elisha Cook, Jr.) outlines his adaptation of the play; the rest of the movie’s “plot” depicts Selby’s proposed script, a romance. In it, theater producer-composer Jeff Hunter (Robert Paige) wants to marry wealthy ingenue Kitty Rand (Jane Frazee), but doesn't want to interfere because her fiancé is his best friend, Woody Taylor (Lewis Howard).

Olsen and Johnson arrive at the palatial Rand estate, laden with props for an elaborate musical revue Jeff is staging as a vehicle for Kitty. Immediately dissatisfied with their revue being turned into the usual Hollywood movie, Ole and Chic spend the remainder of the film disrupting the adaptation's narrative and the central romance by any means possible. Chic's hoydenish, man-crazy sister Betty (Martha Raye) pursues Pepi (Mischa Auer), the revue's leading man and a former Russian nobleman. After a series of mishaps and adventures -- including frequent run-ins with magician/detective Quimby (Hugh Herbert) and constant technical problems while the film is being projected -- Jeff's revue is finally performed for a society audience. Olsen and Johnson repeatedly sabotage and undermine the revue's musical ensembles. The revue is a success anyway, and Jeff wins Kitty for a happy ending.

Screenwriter Selby finishes narrating his script, and Olsen and Johnson take their leave of the studio. The director, frustrated, shoots the screenwriter -- who is uninjured and pays scant attention, but leaks like a sieve when he drinks a glass of water.

Cast

Music

The 1942 Academy Awards nomination for Best Song of "Pig Foot Pete" (which lost to "White Christmas"), was attributed to Hellzapoppin'; however, the song never appears in the film—it was actually performed in the Abbott and Costello film Keep 'Em Flying, another Universal Pictures production from 1941.

The official Academy Awards database credits Hellzapoppin' with the Best Song nomination but comments in a note, "This nomination is a mystery. Both the nominations list and the program from the Awards dinner list the song as being from Hellzapoppin', a 1942 release for Awards purposes. The song does not appear in that film, but did appear in Keep 'Em Flying, a 1941 release from the same production company and studio, and was therefore ineligible for a 1942 nomination."[4]

Dance

External video
 
Hellzapoppin' jazz and dance sequence
  Hellzapoppin' in full color. Colorized with DeOldify

The film has a five-minute Lindy Hop dance sequence at approximately the halfway point. The dance routines are very fast and athletic, including many aerials. The performers are billed as The Congaroos (Arthur White's dance troupe, known professionally as Whitey's Lindy Hoppers), including Frankie Manning and Norma Miller. Slim and Slam are also part of the act. Manning choreographed the routine.

Dean Collins and Martha Raye dance in another part of the film.

Post-production

H. C. Potter directed the film and paid close attention to new camera tricks and comedy effects. As originally conceived by Potter,[5] there wasn't any movie projectionist as played by Shemp Howard. Potter conveyed the illusion that Olsen and Johnson were speaking to the actual projectionist, personally running the picture in each individual theater, and the frequent technical problems were attributed to the unseen projectionist. Potter staged an elaborate finale, where Olsen and Johnson attend the opening of their film at Grauman's Chinese Theatre and plant their footprints in the movie palace's famous celebrity courtyard. Unfortunately for Ole and Chic, the wet cement acts like quicksand and sinks the comedians underground as the end title appears.

Universal executives thought audiences might be confused by some of Potter's scenes. Potter was no longer on the lot, so producer Alex Gottlieb assigned director Eddie Cline to shoot new scenes with Shemp Howard as the new, fictitious projectionist; Jody Gilbert as Shemp's girlfriend; Richard Lane; and Elisha Cook, Jr. Olsen and Johnson were not present for the retakes. Film editor Arthur Hilton inserted a quick clip of Olsen and Johnson into the new ending, which has director Richard Lane expressing his disgust with the script and shooting Elisha Cook, Jr. repeatedly. Cook is uninjured ("I always wear a bulletproof vest around the studio"), but when he drinks a glass of water, the liquid bursts from his chest. H. C. Potter was upset when he saw the finished film: "A lot of things that I had worked very hard on -- innovations -- were, after I had left Universal, gone completely. I screamed and yelled bloody hell, but there was nothing I could do about it."[6]

Reception

Some reviewers had been skeptical that Hellzapoppin' would work as a motion picture, and were surprised that the film version was every bit as funny. Film Bulletin commented, "It did not seem possible that the type of hilarity which went into the making of the legitimate show could be transplanted successfully to the screen. Yet here it is for all to see... [The gags are] plenty good and stack up as ace high comedy material."[7] Motion Picture Reviews was both amused and amazed: "It follows no known formula, and its noisy, spectacular, and hilarious progress is like nothing ever seen on the screen before."[8] The reviewer for The Sydney Morning Herald wrote, in August 1942: "Sections of its extraordinary pattern materialise with uproarious unexpectedness, while hilarious development of some ridiculously funny incident adds to the farcical, burlesque, and slapstick appeal of a production astounding in its originality and verve. It has to be seen to be believed. If there is nothing memorable to take away after the show it is at any rate enjoyable while it lasts."[9]

Hellzapoppin' had its premiere at the Rivoli Theatre in New York City on Christmas Day, 1941. The first performance at 10 a.m. was for 2,000 orphans and a further showing was held at 2 p.m. for 2,000 soldiers and sailors, with the official premiere in the evening.[10] The Rivoli run was relatively short, indicating a flop, but columnist Gilbert Fraunhar explained that the Rivoli was near the Winter Garden Theatre: "Hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers passing the Rivoli were deceived into thinking that they were passing the Winter Garden... Many of them had seen the play, and therefore passed up a theatre where they thought it was still playing."[11]

The Rivoli engagement notwithstanding, Hellzapoppin' became a smash hit. Universal's top boxoffice attraction at the time was Abbott and Costello; Hellzapoppin' exceeded even those returns. "Universal executives admit that the picture is outgrossing the Abbott and Costello films. And when a Universal exec makes an admission like that, the picture has to be doing terrific business," reported Fraunhar. "More specifically, Hellzapoppin', in the bunch of openings it has had to date, has outgrossed every A & C, we are told, except Keep 'Em Flying, which had the benefit of Thanksgiving week openings. And as time rolls on... "Hellz" promises to outdo its only A & C rival."[12]

Realart Pictures reissued Hellzapoppin' in 1948.

References

  1. ^ "101 Pix Gross in Millions" Variety 6 Jan 1943 p 58
  2. ^ "Hellzapoppin' Company Party". The New York Times. June 22, 1941.
  3. ^ "Mayfair Will Film Hit Broadway Revue". The Los Angeles Times. August 2, 1940.
  4. ^ Search of https://awardsdatabase.oscars.org/
  5. ^ H. C. Potter to Leonard Maltin, 1971 interview for Film Fan Monthly, reprinted in Maltin's Movie Comedy Teams, New American Library, 1985, p. 262.
  6. ^ H. C. Potter to Leonard Maltin, p. 262.
  7. ^ Film Bulletin, Dec. 29, 1941, p. 20.
  8. ^ Motion Picture Reviews, Jan. 1, 1942, p. 5.
  9. ^ "New Films". The Sydney Morning Herald: 7. August 17, 1942.
  10. ^ "Exploitation Shows Arranged for 'Hellza'". Daily Variety. December 8, 1941. p. 3.
  11. ^ Gilbert Fraunhar, "Comments on Hellzapoppin', The Exhibitor, Feb. 4, 1942, p. 16.
  12. ^ Fraunhar, p. 16.

External links

  • Hellzapoppin' at IMDb

hellzapoppin, film, hellzapoppin, 1941, american, musical, comedy, film, adaptation, stage, musical, same, name, that, broadway, from, 1938, 1941, film, directed, potter, distributed, universal, pictures, although, entire, broadway, cast, initially, slated, fe. Hellzapoppin is a 1941 American musical comedy film and an adaptation of the stage musical of the same name that ran on Broadway from 1938 to 1941 The film is directed by H C Potter and distributed by Universal Pictures 2 Although the entire Broadway cast was initially slated to feature in the film 3 the only performers from the stage production to appear in the film were lead actors Ole Olsen and Chic Johnson and the specialty act Whitey s Lindy Hoppers Hellzapoppin Theatrical release posterDirected byH C Potter Joseph A McDonough assistant Eddie Cline retakes Written byNat Perrin Warren Wilson Alex GottliebProduced byAlex Gottlieb Jules Levey uncredited Glenn TryonStarringOle Olsen Chic JohnsonCinematographyElwood BredellEdited byMilton Carruth Ted J KentMusic byFrank Skinner Ted Cain Charles PrevinDistributed byUniversal PicturesRelease datesDecember 25 1941 1941 12 25 Premiere December 26 1941 1941 12 26 Running time84 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBox office 1 7 million US rentals 1 Alongside Olsen and Johnson both of whom produced and starred in the Broadway musical the cast of Hellzapoppin includes Martha Raye Mischa Auer Shemp Howard and the musical duo Slim amp Slam The film is deliberately nonsensical with the comedians stopping the film to address both the movie audience and the projection booth breaking the fourth wall trick photography embellishing the visual gags and the traditional romantic subplot ridiculed as it unfolds Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Music 4 Dance 5 Post production 6 Reception 7 References 8 External linksPlot EditShemp Howard begins the film as Louie the projectionist of the Universal Theatre exhibiting a musical pageant of chorus girls promenading down a staircase The staircase collapses and turns into a slide conveying the dancers straight to hell where they are tortured by demons Ole Olsen and Chic Johnson playing themselves arrive in the midst of the mayhem by taxi and after a series of pranks step back to reveal that they are on a movie soundstage They are hounded by the film s director Richard Lane who tries to explain that their wild comedy won t work in movies Mousy screenwriter Harry Selby Elisha Cook Jr outlines his adaptation of the play the rest of the movie s plot depicts Selby s proposed script a romance In it theater producer composer Jeff Hunter Robert Paige wants to marry wealthy ingenue Kitty Rand Jane Frazee but doesn t want to interfere because her fiance is his best friend Woody Taylor Lewis Howard Olsen and Johnson arrive at the palatial Rand estate laden with props for an elaborate musical revue Jeff is staging as a vehicle for Kitty Immediately dissatisfied with their revue being turned into the usual Hollywood movie Ole and Chic spend the remainder of the film disrupting the adaptation s narrative and the central romance by any means possible Chic s hoydenish man crazy sister Betty Martha Raye pursues Pepi Mischa Auer the revue s leading man and a former Russian nobleman After a series of mishaps and adventures including frequent run ins with magician detective Quimby Hugh Herbert and constant technical problems while the film is being projected Jeff s revue is finally performed for a society audience Olsen and Johnson repeatedly sabotage and undermine the revue s musical ensembles The revue is a success anyway and Jeff wins Kitty for a happy ending Screenwriter Selby finishes narrating his script and Olsen and Johnson take their leave of the studio The director frustrated shoots the screenwriter who is uninjured and pays scant attention but leaks like a sieve when he drinks a glass of water Cast EditOle Olsen as Himself Chic Johnson as Himself Martha Raye as Betty Johnson Hugh Herbert as Quimby Jane Frazee as Kitty Rand Robert Paige as Jeff Hunter Mischa Auer as Pepi Dick Lane as Director Lewis Howard as Woody Taylor Clarence Kolb as Andrew Rand Nella Walker as Mrs Rand Shemp Howard as Louie the Projectionist Elisha Cook Jr as Harry Selby Frank Darien as Man calling for Mrs Jones Catherine Johnson as Lena lady looking for Oscar Gus Schilling as Orchestra Conductor Slim Gaillard and Slam Stewart as themselves Slim and Slam Whitey s Lindy Hoppers including Norma Miller as a cook and Frankie Manning as the Harlem Congaroos Gil Perkins as Butler in Pool uncredited Dale Van Sickel as Frankenstein s monster uncredited Music EditThe 1942 Academy Awards nomination for Best Song of Pig Foot Pete which lost to White Christmas was attributed to Hellzapoppin however the song never appears in the film it was actually performed in the Abbott and Costello film Keep Em Flying another Universal Pictures production from 1941 The official Academy Awards database credits Hellzapoppin with the Best Song nomination but comments in a note This nomination is a mystery Both the nominations list and the program from the Awards dinner list the song as being from Hellzapoppin a 1942 release for Awards purposes The song does not appear in that film but did appear in Keep Em Flying a 1941 release from the same production company and studio and was therefore ineligible for a 1942 nomination 4 Dance EditExternal video Hellzapoppin jazz and dance sequence Hellzapoppin in full color Colorized with DeOldifyThe film has a five minute Lindy Hop dance sequence at approximately the halfway point The dance routines are very fast and athletic including many aerials The performers are billed as The Congaroos Arthur White s dance troupe known professionally as Whitey s Lindy Hoppers including Frankie Manning and Norma Miller Slim and Slam are also part of the act Manning choreographed the routine Dean Collins and Martha Raye dance in another part of the film Post production EditH C Potter directed the film and paid close attention to new camera tricks and comedy effects As originally conceived by Potter 5 there wasn t any movie projectionist as played by Shemp Howard Potter conveyed the illusion that Olsen and Johnson were speaking to the actual projectionist personally running the picture in each individual theater and the frequent technical problems were attributed to the unseen projectionist Potter staged an elaborate finale where Olsen and Johnson attend the opening of their film at Grauman s Chinese Theatre and plant their footprints in the movie palace s famous celebrity courtyard Unfortunately for Ole and Chic the wet cement acts like quicksand and sinks the comedians underground as the end title appears Universal executives thought audiences might be confused by some of Potter s scenes Potter was no longer on the lot so producer Alex Gottlieb assigned director Eddie Cline to shoot new scenes with Shemp Howard as the new fictitious projectionist Jody Gilbert as Shemp s girlfriend Richard Lane and Elisha Cook Jr Olsen and Johnson were not present for the retakes Film editor Arthur Hilton inserted a quick clip of Olsen and Johnson into the new ending which has director Richard Lane expressing his disgust with the script and shooting Elisha Cook Jr repeatedly Cook is uninjured I always wear a bulletproof vest around the studio but when he drinks a glass of water the liquid bursts from his chest H C Potter was upset when he saw the finished film A lot of things that I had worked very hard on innovations were after I had left Universal gone completely I screamed and yelled bloody hell but there was nothing I could do about it 6 Reception EditSome reviewers had been skeptical that Hellzapoppin would work as a motion picture and were surprised that the film version was every bit as funny Film Bulletin commented It did not seem possible that the type of hilarity which went into the making of the legitimate show could be transplanted successfully to the screen Yet here it is for all to see The gags are plenty good and stack up as ace high comedy material 7 Motion Picture Reviews was both amused and amazed It follows no known formula and its noisy spectacular and hilarious progress is like nothing ever seen on the screen before 8 The reviewer for The Sydney Morning Herald wrote in August 1942 Sections of its extraordinary pattern materialise with uproarious unexpectedness while hilarious development of some ridiculously funny incident adds to the farcical burlesque and slapstick appeal of a production astounding in its originality and verve It has to be seen to be believed If there is nothing memorable to take away after the show it is at any rate enjoyable while it lasts 9 Hellzapoppin had its premiere at the Rivoli Theatre in New York City on Christmas Day 1941 The first performance at 10 a m was for 2 000 orphans and a further showing was held at 2 p m for 2 000 soldiers and sailors with the official premiere in the evening 10 The Rivoli run was relatively short indicating a flop but columnist Gilbert Fraunhar explained that the Rivoli was near the Winter Garden Theatre Hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers passing the Rivoli were deceived into thinking that they were passing the Winter Garden Many of them had seen the play and therefore passed up a theatre where they thought it was still playing 11 The Rivoli engagement notwithstanding Hellzapoppin became a smash hit Universal s top boxoffice attraction at the time was Abbott and Costello Hellzapoppin exceeded even those returns Universal executives admit that the picture is outgrossing the Abbott and Costello films And when a Universal exec makes an admission like that the picture has to be doing terrific business reported Fraunhar More specifically Hellzapoppin in the bunch of openings it has had to date has outgrossed every A amp C we are told except Keep Em Flying which had the benefit of Thanksgiving week openings And as time rolls on Hellz promises to outdo its only A amp C rival 12 Realart Pictures reissued Hellzapoppin in 1948 References Edit 101 Pix Gross in Millions Variety 6 Jan 1943 p 58 Hellzapoppin Company Party The New York Times June 22 1941 Mayfair Will Film Hit Broadway Revue The Los Angeles Times August 2 1940 Search of https awardsdatabase oscars org H C Potter to Leonard Maltin 1971 interview for Film Fan Monthly reprinted in Maltin s Movie Comedy Teams New American Library 1985 p 262 H C Potter to Leonard Maltin p 262 Film Bulletin Dec 29 1941 p 20 Motion Picture Reviews Jan 1 1942 p 5 New Films The Sydney Morning Herald 7 August 17 1942 Exploitation Shows Arranged for Hellza Daily Variety December 8 1941 p 3 Gilbert Fraunhar Comments on Hellzapoppin The Exhibitor Feb 4 1942 p 16 Fraunhar p 16 External links EditHellzapoppin at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hellzapoppin 27 film amp oldid 1165892116, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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