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Monkey Business (1931 film)

Monkey Business is a 1931 American pre-Code comedy film.[3][4] It is the third of the Marx Brothers' released movies (Groucho, Harpo, Chico and Zeppo), and the first with an original screenplay rather than an adaptation of one of their Broadway shows. The film also features Thelma Todd, Harry Woods and Ruth Hall. It is directed by Norman Z. McLeod with screenplay by S. J. Perelman and Will B. Johnstone. Much of the story takes place on an ocean liner crossing the Atlantic Ocean.

Monkey Business
theatrical release poster
Directed byNorman Z. McLeod
Written byS. J. Perelman
Will B. Johnstone
Add'l dialogue
Arthur Sheekman
Contrib. writers
Al Shean
Nat Perrin[1]
Produced byHerman J. Mankiewicz
StarringGroucho Marx
Harpo Marx
Chico Marx
Zeppo Marx
CinematographyArthur L. Todd
Music byJohn Leipold
Production
company
Distributed byParamount Publix Corp[1]
Release date
  • September 19, 1931 (1931-09-19)
[2]
Running time
77-78 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

On board an ocean liner, four stowaways hide in barrels in the ship's cargo hold. After singing "Sweet Adeline", they are discovered. The naval officers spend the rest of the voyage chasing and attempting to arrest the stowaways. Chico and Harpo disrupt a chess game and confiscate the board, taking it into the stateroom of racketeer Big Joe Helton and his daughter Mary, during a confrontation with rival gangster Alky Briggs. After they scare off Briggs, Big Joe hires Chico and Harpo to be his bodyguards. Groucho dances and romances with Briggs' wife, Lucille, until he is caught and threatened by Briggs. Groucho's audacity convinces Briggs to hire him and Zeppo. Briggs gives them loaded guns, which they immediately ditch in a bucket of water. Groucho offers his services to Big Joe, who says he will think it over.

As the ocean liner is about to dock in the United States, the stowaways realize that to get off the boat, they must steal passports and fool customs officials. Zeppo steals the passport of movie star Maurice Chevalier, and demonstrates his ability to mimic Chevalier's singing. The four butt in line at customs and Zeppo impersonates Chevalier. He is unsuccessful, however, and passes the passport to Chico, Groucho and Harpo, who each attempt unconvincing portrayals of Chevalier singing the same song, with Harpo resorting to a phonograph strapped on his back with an actual record of Chevalier singing. The four escape the authorities after hiding under a covered load of baggage.

Big Joe and his daughter, whom Zeppo met and romanced on board, host a party at which Groucho makes announcements, Chico plays piano and Harpo plays harp. Briggs' men kidnap Big Joe's daughter and take her to an old barn. The former stowaways follow and a fight ensues. The daughter is rescued, and Groucho attempts to find a needle in a haystack.

Except in the credits and in the screenplay, the Marx Brothers' characters have no names in this film. They are referred to simply as "the stowaways".

Cast

 
The four Marx Brothers stowing away on an ocean vessel by hiding in barrels in this promotional still for Monkey Business. Left to right: Harpo, Zeppo, Chico, Groucho.

Production

Writers S. J. Perelman and Will B. Johnstone were excited to be working with the Marx Brothers. However, producer Herman J. Mankiewicz advised them to lower their expectations. He called the brothers "mercurial, devious, and ungrateful ... I hate to depress you, but you'll rue the day you ever took the assignment. This is an ordeal by fire, make sure you wear asbestos pants." Of the original script delivered by Perelman and Johnstone, Groucho said, "It stinks." He considered Perelman too intellectual to write for the Marx Brothers manic comic style. The final script was the result of five months of work by the brothers, gag writers, director Norman Z. MacLeod and Mankiewicz.[5] MacLeod later said that up to 12 writers worked on the film, and that Eddie Cantor contributed when he visited the set during shooting.[1]

Typical for many Marx Brothers films, production censors demanded changes in some lines with sexual innuendo.[6] Monkey Business was banned in Ireland because censors feared it would encourage anarchic tendencies.[5][7][8] In Ireland, the film was passed on January 8, 1932, with '16 unspecified cuts to script', including characters falling over each other in a dance scene.[9][10]

This is the first Marx Brothers film not to feature Margaret Dumont: this time their female foil is comedian Thelma Todd, who would also star in the Marx Brothers' next film, Horse Feathers. In December 1935, Todd was found dead in her car, inside her garage apparently from accidental carbon monoxide poisoning. A line of dialogue in Monkey Business seems to foreshadow Todd's death. Alone with Todd in her cabin, Groucho quips: "You're a woman who's been getting nothing but dirty breaks. Well, we can clean and tighten your brakes, but you'll have to stay in the garage all night."[11]

Early on in Monkey Business, the Brothers—playing stowaways concealed in barrels—harmonize unseen while performing the popular song "Sweet Adeline". It is a matter of debate whether Harpo joins in with the singing. (One of the ship's crew asserts to the captain that he knows there are four stowaways because he can hear them singing "Sweet Adeline".) If so, it would be one of only a few times Harpo used speech on screen, as opposed to other vocalizations such as whistling or sneezing. At least one other possible on-screen utterance occurs in the film A Day at the Races (1937), in which Groucho, Chico, and Harpo are heard singing "Down by the Old Mill Stream" in three-part harmony.

This was the first Marx film to be written specifically for film, and the first shot in Hollywood. Their first two films were filmed at Paramount Pictures' Astoria Studios in Queens, New York City.

The Marx Brothers' real life father (Sam "Frenchie" Marx) is briefly seen in a cameo appearance, sitting on top of luggage behind the Brothers on the pier as they wave to the First Mate upon alighting. Sam Marx was 72 at the time, and the appearance was his film debut. He was paid $12.50 each day for two days' work.[1]

Monkey Business was Norman MacLeod's solo directorial debut.[1]

Songs

One of the sequences in this film involves the four brothers attempting to get off the ship using a passport stolen from famous singer (and fellow Paramount star) Maurice Chevalier. Each brother impersonates Chevalier (complete with straw hat) and sings "You Brought a New Kind of Love to Me" ("If the nightingales could sing like you ...") in turn. This poses a problem for the mute Harpo, who mimes to a hidden phonograph tied to his back which plays the Chevalier recording. When the turntable slows down and he has to rewind it, the ruse is uncovered. Earlier, when Zeppo first meets gangster Joe Helton's daughter Mary on the promenade of the ocean liner, "Just One More Chance" by Arthur Johnston and Sam Coslow can be heard playing in the background. Chico performs two pieces on the piano, the "Pizzicato" from Sylvia by Léo Delibes, which then morphs into the song "When I Take My Sugar to Tea", written by Sammy Fain, Irving Kahal, and Pierre Norman. Harpo performs "I'm Daffy over You" by Sol Violinsky and Chico. The dance band at Mary's debut party is playing the song "Ho Hum!" when the Marx Brothers arrive.

Musical numbers

Reception and impact

 
Left to right: Harpo, Zeppo, Chico, and Groucho.

Monkey Business was a critical and box office success,[11] and is considered one of the Marx Brothers' best and funniest films.[13][5]

Contemporary reviews were positive. Mordaunt Hall of The New York Times wrote, "Whether it is really as funny as 'Animal Crackers' is a matter of opinion. Suffice it to say that few persons will be able to go to the Rivoli and keep a straight face."[14] Variety's review began, "The usual Marx madhouse and plenty of laughs sprouting from a plot structure resembling one of those California bungalows which sprout up overnight."[3] Film Daily agreed that the plot was "flimsy", but also found the film "crammed all the way with laughs and there's never a dead spot."[15] John Mosher of The New Yorker thought the film was "the best this family has given us."[16]

The film was evidently based on two routines the Marx Brothers did during their early days in vaudeville (Home Again and Mr. Green's Reception), along with a story idea from one of Groucho's friends, Bert Granet, called The Seas Are Wet.[11][17] The passport scene is a reworking of a stage sketch in which the brothers burst into a theatrical agent's office auditioning an impersonation of a current big star. It appeared in their stage shows On the Mezzanine Floor and I'll Say She Is (1924). This skit was also done by the Marxes in the Paramount promotional film The House That Shadows Built (1931).

The concept of the Marx Brothers being stowaways on a ship would be repeated in an episode of their radio series Flywheel, Shyster, and Flywheel (1933) in the episode "The False Roderick", and would also be recycled in their MGM film A Night at the Opera (1935).[18] The essence of Groucho's joke, "Sure, I'm a doctor—where's the horse?" would serve as an integral plot element for their film A Day at the Races (1937). Also repeated in that later film would be the uproarious medical examination that Harpo and Chico give opera singer Madame Swempski (Cecil Cunningham).

Awards and honors

Sequel

According to Turner Classic Movies' Robert Osborne, a sequel was planned for this film that would continue the gangster theme. During the development of that film, aviator Charles Lindbergh's son was kidnapped and killed by what were believed to be gangsters. The writers quickly shifted gears and instead based the next film, Horse Feathers, very loosely on the Marx Brothers' earlier stage show Fun in Hi Skule.[20][17]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Monkey Business at the American Film Institute Catalog
  2. ^ Hanson, Patricia King, ed. (1993). The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States: Feature Films, 1931-1940. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. p. 1418. ISBN 0-520-07908-6.
  3. ^ a b "Film Reviews". Variety. New York: Variety, Inc. October 13, 1931. p. 14.
  4. ^ Harrison's Reports film review; October 17, 1931, page 167.
  5. ^ a b c Mankiewicz, Ben (July 11, 2018) Intro to the Turner Classic Movies presentation of the film
  6. ^ Censored Films and Television at University of Virginia online
  7. ^ Malone, Aubrey (May 27, 2011). "West and the Rest". Censoring Hollywood: Sex and Violence in Film and on the Cutting Room Floor. McFarland & Co Inc. p. 51. ISBN 978-0786464654. Retrieved July 3, 2013. The Marx Brothers 'Monkey Business' was also banned in Ireland in 1931 for fear it would "provoke the Irish to anarchy".
  8. ^ "Ten films banned in Ireland".
  9. ^ "Irish Film Censors' Records - Trinity College Dublin".
  10. ^ "Irish Film Censors' Records - Trinity College Dublin".
  11. ^ a b c Louvish, Simon (2000). Monkey Business: The Lives and Legends of the Marx Brothers. New York City: Thomas Dunne Books. ISBN 0312252927.
  12. ^ Staff (1958) Catalog of Copyright Entries: Third series January–June 1958, v.12, pt.5, n.1, p.685 Library of Congress
  13. ^ Griffin, Danel. Movie Review: Monkey Business January 8, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. Film as Art. University of Alaska Southeast. Retrieved on April 6, 2008.
  14. ^ Hall, Mordaunt (October 8, 1931). "Movie Review - Monkey Business". The New York Times. Retrieved September 21, 2015.
  15. ^ "Monkey Business". Film Daily. New York: Wid's Films and Film Folk, Inc.: 8 September 27, 1931.
  16. ^ Mosher, John (October 17, 1931). "The Current Cinema". The New Yorker. New York: F-R Publishing Corp. p. 65.
  17. ^ a b "Horse Feathers". Marxology. Retrieved April 6, 2008.
  18. ^ A Night at the Opera trivia at the Internet Movie Database.
  19. ^ "AFI's 100 Years...100 Laughs" (PDF). American Film Institute. Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  20. ^ Dirks, Tim. "Movie Review: "Horse Feathers"". Filmsite.org. Retrieved April 6, 2008.

External links

monkey, business, 1931, film, monkey, business, 1931, american, code, comedy, film, third, marx, brothers, released, movies, groucho, harpo, chico, zeppo, first, with, original, screenplay, rather, than, adaptation, their, broadway, shows, film, also, features. Monkey Business is a 1931 American pre Code comedy film 3 4 It is the third of the Marx Brothers released movies Groucho Harpo Chico and Zeppo and the first with an original screenplay rather than an adaptation of one of their Broadway shows The film also features Thelma Todd Harry Woods and Ruth Hall It is directed by Norman Z McLeod with screenplay by S J Perelman and Will B Johnstone Much of the story takes place on an ocean liner crossing the Atlantic Ocean Monkey Businesstheatrical release posterDirected byNorman Z McLeodWritten byS J PerelmanWill B JohnstoneAdd l dialogueArthur SheekmanContrib writersAl SheanNat Perrin 1 Produced byHerman J MankiewiczStarringGroucho MarxHarpo MarxChico MarxZeppo MarxCinematographyArthur L ToddMusic byJohn LeipoldProductioncompanyParamount Publix Corp 1 Distributed byParamount Publix Corp 1 Release dateSeptember 19 1931 1931 09 19 2 Running time77 78 minutes 1 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglish Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Songs 3 2 Musical numbers 4 Reception and impact 5 Awards and honors 6 Sequel 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksPlot EditOn board an ocean liner four stowaways hide in barrels in the ship s cargo hold After singing Sweet Adeline they are discovered The naval officers spend the rest of the voyage chasing and attempting to arrest the stowaways Chico and Harpo disrupt a chess game and confiscate the board taking it into the stateroom of racketeer Big Joe Helton and his daughter Mary during a confrontation with rival gangster Alky Briggs After they scare off Briggs Big Joe hires Chico and Harpo to be his bodyguards Groucho dances and romances with Briggs wife Lucille until he is caught and threatened by Briggs Groucho s audacity convinces Briggs to hire him and Zeppo Briggs gives them loaded guns which they immediately ditch in a bucket of water Groucho offers his services to Big Joe who says he will think it over As the ocean liner is about to dock in the United States the stowaways realize that to get off the boat they must steal passports and fool customs officials Zeppo steals the passport of movie star Maurice Chevalier and demonstrates his ability to mimic Chevalier s singing The four butt in line at customs and Zeppo impersonates Chevalier He is unsuccessful however and passes the passport to Chico Groucho and Harpo who each attempt unconvincing portrayals of Chevalier singing the same song with Harpo resorting to a phonograph strapped on his back with an actual record of Chevalier singing The four escape the authorities after hiding under a covered load of baggage Big Joe and his daughter whom Zeppo met and romanced on board host a party at which Groucho makes announcements Chico plays piano and Harpo plays harp Briggs men kidnap Big Joe s daughter and take her to an old barn The former stowaways follow and a fight ensues The daughter is rescued and Groucho attempts to find a needle in a haystack Except in the credits and in the screenplay the Marx Brothers characters have no names in this film They are referred to simply as the stowaways Cast Edit The four Marx Brothers stowing away on an ocean vessel by hiding in barrels in this promotional still for Monkey Business Left to right Harpo Zeppo Chico Groucho Groucho Marx as Groucho Harpo Marx as Harpo Chico Marx as Chico Zeppo Marx as Zeppo Rockliffe Fellowes as J J Big Joe Helton Harry Woods as Alky Briggs Thelma Todd as Lucille Briggs Ruth Hall as Mary Helton Tom Kennedy as First Mate Gibson Cecil Cunningham as Madame Swempski opera singer giving interview on ship Charlotte Mineau as Emily woman on veranda of mansion having an illicit affair Maxine Castle as Mrs Schmalhausen opera singer performing O Sole Mio Rolfe Sedan as the ship s barber Evelyn Pierce as Manicurist Billy Bletcher as Man buried in deck chair Bess Flowers as wife of man dressed as Indian at party Cyril Ring as Party guest Ben Taggart as Captain Corcoran Davison Clark as passport officialProduction EditWriters S J Perelman and Will B Johnstone were excited to be working with the Marx Brothers However producer Herman J Mankiewicz advised them to lower their expectations He called the brothers mercurial devious and ungrateful I hate to depress you but you ll rue the day you ever took the assignment This is an ordeal by fire make sure you wear asbestos pants Of the original script delivered by Perelman and Johnstone Groucho said It stinks He considered Perelman too intellectual to write for the Marx Brothers manic comic style The final script was the result of five months of work by the brothers gag writers director Norman Z MacLeod and Mankiewicz 5 MacLeod later said that up to 12 writers worked on the film and that Eddie Cantor contributed when he visited the set during shooting 1 Typical for many Marx Brothers films production censors demanded changes in some lines with sexual innuendo 6 Monkey Business was banned in Ireland because censors feared it would encourage anarchic tendencies 5 7 8 In Ireland the film was passed on January 8 1932 with 16 unspecified cuts to script including characters falling over each other in a dance scene 9 10 This is the first Marx Brothers film not to feature Margaret Dumont this time their female foil is comedian Thelma Todd who would also star in the Marx Brothers next film Horse Feathers In December 1935 Todd was found dead in her car inside her garage apparently from accidental carbon monoxide poisoning A line of dialogue in Monkey Business seems to foreshadow Todd s death Alone with Todd in her cabin Groucho quips You re a woman who s been getting nothing but dirty breaks Well we can clean and tighten your brakes but you ll have to stay in the garage all night 11 Early on in Monkey Business the Brothers playing stowaways concealed in barrels harmonize unseen while performing the popular song Sweet Adeline It is a matter of debate whether Harpo joins in with the singing One of the ship s crew asserts to the captain that he knows there are four stowaways because he can hear them singing Sweet Adeline If so it would be one of only a few times Harpo used speech on screen as opposed to other vocalizations such as whistling or sneezing At least one other possible on screen utterance occurs in the film A Day at the Races 1937 in which Groucho Chico and Harpo are heard singing Down by the Old Mill Stream in three part harmony This was the first Marx film to be written specifically for film and the first shot in Hollywood Their first two films were filmed at Paramount Pictures Astoria Studios in Queens New York City The Marx Brothers real life father Sam Frenchie Marx is briefly seen in a cameo appearance sitting on top of luggage behind the Brothers on the pier as they wave to the First Mate upon alighting Sam Marx was 72 at the time and the appearance was his film debut He was paid 12 50 each day for two days work 1 Monkey Business was Norman MacLeod s solo directorial debut 1 Songs Edit One of the sequences in this film involves the four brothers attempting to get off the ship using a passport stolen from famous singer and fellow Paramount star Maurice Chevalier Each brother impersonates Chevalier complete with straw hat and sings You Brought a New Kind of Love to Me If the nightingales could sing like you in turn This poses a problem for the mute Harpo who mimes to a hidden phonograph tied to his back which plays the Chevalier recording When the turntable slows down and he has to rewind it the ruse is uncovered Earlier when Zeppo first meets gangster Joe Helton s daughter Mary on the promenade of the ocean liner Just One More Chance by Arthur Johnston and Sam Coslow can be heard playing in the background Chico performs two pieces on the piano the Pizzicato from Sylvia by Leo Delibes which then morphs into the song When I Take My Sugar to Tea written by Sammy Fain Irving Kahal and Pierre Norman Harpo performs I m Daffy over You by Sol Violinsky and Chico The dance band at Mary s debut party is playing the song Ho Hum when the Marx Brothers arrive Musical numbers Edit Sweet Adeline music by Harry Armstrong lyrics by Richard Gerard 1 Just One More Chance by Arthur Johnston and Sam Coslow You Brought a New Kind of Love to Me music and lyrics by Irving Kahal Pierre Norman and Sammy Fain 1 Pizzicato from Sylvia by Leo Delibes played on the piano by Chico When I Take My Sugar to Tea by Sammy Fain Irving Kahal and Pierre Norman O Sole Mio sung by opera singer Maxine Castle with harp accompaniment by Harpo music by Eduardo di Capua lyrics by Giovanni Capurro 1 I m Daffy Over You by Chico Marx and Sol Violinsky Solly Ginsberg 12 Reception and impact Edit Left to right Harpo Zeppo Chico and Groucho Monkey Business was a critical and box office success 11 and is considered one of the Marx Brothers best and funniest films 13 5 Contemporary reviews were positive Mordaunt Hall of The New York Times wrote Whether it is really as funny as Animal Crackers is a matter of opinion Suffice it to say that few persons will be able to go to the Rivoli and keep a straight face 14 Variety s review began The usual Marx madhouse and plenty of laughs sprouting from a plot structure resembling one of those California bungalows which sprout up overnight 3 Film Daily agreed that the plot was flimsy but also found the film crammed all the way with laughs and there s never a dead spot 15 John Mosher of The New Yorker thought the film was the best this family has given us 16 The film was evidently based on two routines the Marx Brothers did during their early days in vaudeville Home Again and Mr Green s Reception along with a story idea from one of Groucho s friends Bert Granet called The Seas Are Wet 11 17 The passport scene is a reworking of a stage sketch in which the brothers burst into a theatrical agent s office auditioning an impersonation of a current big star It appeared in their stage shows On the Mezzanine Floor and I ll Say She Is 1924 This skit was also done by the Marxes in the Paramount promotional film The House That Shadows Built 1931 The concept of the Marx Brothers being stowaways on a ship would be repeated in an episode of their radio series Flywheel Shyster and Flywheel 1933 in the episode The False Roderick and would also be recycled in their MGM film A Night at the Opera 1935 18 The essence of Groucho s joke Sure I m a doctor where s the horse would serve as an integral plot element for their film A Day at the Races 1937 Also repeated in that later film would be the uproarious medical examination that Harpo and Chico give opera singer Madame Swempski Cecil Cunningham Awards and honors Edit2000 AFI s 100 Years 100 Laughs 73 19 Sequel EditAccording to Turner Classic Movies Robert Osborne a sequel was planned for this film that would continue the gangster theme During the development of that film aviator Charles Lindbergh s son was kidnapped and killed by what were believed to be gangsters The writers quickly shifted gears and instead based the next film Horse Feathers very loosely on the Marx Brothers earlier stage show Fun in Hi Skule 20 17 See also EditList of United States comedy filmsReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j Monkey Business at the American Film Institute Catalog Hanson Patricia King ed 1993 The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States Feature Films 1931 1940 Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press p 1418 ISBN 0 520 07908 6 a b Film Reviews Variety New York Variety Inc October 13 1931 p 14 Harrison s Reports film review October 17 1931 page 167 a b c Mankiewicz Ben July 11 2018 Intro to the Turner Classic Movies presentation of the film Censored Films and Television at University of Virginia online Malone Aubrey May 27 2011 West and the Rest Censoring Hollywood Sex and Violence in Film and on the Cutting Room Floor McFarland amp Co Inc p 51 ISBN 978 0786464654 Retrieved July 3 2013 The Marx Brothers Monkey Business was also banned in Ireland in 1931 for fear it would provoke the Irish to anarchy Ten films banned in Ireland Irish Film Censors Records Trinity College Dublin Irish Film Censors Records Trinity College Dublin a b c Louvish Simon 2000 Monkey Business The Lives and Legends of the Marx Brothers New York City Thomas Dunne Books ISBN 0312252927 Staff 1958 Catalog of Copyright Entries Third series January June 1958 v 12 pt 5 n 1 p 685 Library of Congress Griffin Danel Movie Review Monkey Business Archived January 8 2008 at the Wayback Machine Film as Art University of Alaska Southeast Retrieved on April 6 2008 Hall Mordaunt October 8 1931 Movie Review Monkey Business The New York Times Retrieved September 21 2015 Monkey Business Film Daily New York Wid s Films and Film Folk Inc 8 September 27 1931 Mosher John October 17 1931 The Current Cinema The New Yorker New York F R Publishing Corp p 65 a b Horse Feathers Marxology Retrieved April 6 2008 A Night at the Opera trivia at the Internet Movie Database AFI s 100 Years 100 Laughs PDF American Film Institute Retrieved August 20 2016 Dirks Tim Movie Review Horse Feathers Filmsite org Retrieved April 6 2008 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Monkey Business 1931 film Monkey Business at the American Film Institute Catalog Monkey Business at IMDb Monkey Business at the TCM Movie Database Monkey Business at AllMovie The Marx Brothers Council Podcast discussing Monkey Business Monkey Business is available for free download at the Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Monkey Business 1931 film amp oldid 1144836669, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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