Show Girl In Hollywood

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Show Girl In Hollywood (1930)
Directed by Mervyn LeRoy
Produced by Robert North
Written by Harvey F. Thew
James A. Starr
based on the novel by J.P. McEvoy
Starring Alice White
Jack Mulhall
Blanche Sweet
Ford Sterling
Music by Joseph Burke
Ray Henderson
Cinematography Sol Polito (Technicolor)
Editing by Peter Fritch
Distributed by First National Pictures: A Subsidiary of Warner Bros.
Release date(s) April 20, 1930
Running time 80 Minutes
Country Flag of United States United States
Language English
IMDb profile

Show Girl In Hollywood (1930) is an All-Talking musical comedy/drama film with Technicolor sequences. It was adapted from the novel "Hollywood Girl" by J.P. McEvoy.

Contents

Show Girl in Hollywood tells the story of a young girl, Dixie Dugan (Alice White), who is lured to Hollywood by the empty promises of a pompous film director (John Miljan). Her boyfriend (Jack Mulhall) is not too keen on the idea. Once there, she soon realizes who empty the director's promises were. She meets and becomes friends with Donny Harris (Blanche Sweet), a once popular film star. Dixie does get her break but ruins things by getting temperamental. In the process, she also ruins Donny's chances for a comeback, who then attempts suicide. She is saved and Dixie realizes her selfishness and convinces the studio bosses to "go on with the picture", for Donny's sake.

Al Jolson (and his wife Ruby Keeler), Noah Beery (with his son), Walter Pidgeon and Loretta Young make a cameo appearance in this film in the final reel, which was photographed in Technicolor. All four of these actors were big stars for Warner Bros. in 1930 but only two of them (Al Jolson and Loretta Young) managed to keep their popularity beyond the early talkie period.

  • "I've Got My Eye on You"
  • "Hang Onto a Rainbow"
  • "There's a Tear for Every Smile in Hollywood"
  • "Merrily We Roll Along"

The film only survives in black and white. The last reel was originally in Technicolor but no color prints seem to have survived.

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