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Broadway Babies ad in The Film Daily, Jan-Jun 1929 (page 1330 crop)

"Broadway Babies" ad in The Film Daily, 1929

Broadway Babies, aka Broadway Daddies (UK) and Ragazze d'America (Italy), is a 1929 all-talking Pre-Code black and white American musical film produced and distributed by First National Pictures, a subsidiary of Warner Brothers. The film was directed by Mervyn LeRoy and starred Alice White and Charles Delaney. This was White's first sound film with dialogue.

Plot[]

Chorus girl Delight "Dee" Foster (Alice White) is in love with stage manager Billy Buvanny (Charles Delaney) and he also loves her. They plan to marry until bootlegger Perc Gessant (Fred Kohler) steps in. Dee is led to believe that Billy is in love with another girl, so she agrees to play around with Gessant when he becomes interested in her. When Gessant proposes marriage, Dee accepts. As they are about to be married, rival gangsters shoot Gessant and he ends up dying. Dee is reconciled with Billy and they become engaged.

Cast[]

  • Alice White as Delight "Dee" Foster
  • Marion Byron as Florine Chanler
  • Sally Eilers as Navarre King
  • Charles Delaney as Billy Buvanny
  • Tom Dugan as Scotty
  • Bodil Rosing as Sarah Durgan
  • Maurice Black as Nick Stepanos
  • Fred Kohler as Perc Gessant
  • Louis Natheaux as August 'Gus' Brand
  • Lew Harvey as Joe, one of the poker players (uncredited)
  • Aggie Herring as Landlady (uncredited)
  • Al Hill as One of Perc's henchmen (uncredited)
  • Armand Kaliz as Tony Ginetti, the nightclub manager (uncredited)

Production[]

Broadway Babies was one of the many movie musicals with a Broadway setting that were made at the dawn of the "talkie" era. Such films were called "backstagers", a vogue that evolved during the emergence of sound pictures and from the success of The Jazz Singer (1927) and The Singing Fool (1928), both also Warner Bros.' films.[2] Broadway Babies was also one of a number of similar vehicles created for Alice White; it was White's first all-sound as well as her most successful picture.[3] The film was adapted from "Broadway Musketeers", a story by Jay Gelzer.[4]

Songs[]

Three songs were written for White to perform in Broadway Babies: "Wishing and Waiting for Love" with lyrics by Grant Clarke and music by Harry Akst; "Jig, Jig, Jigaloo", lyrics by Al Bryan, music by George W. Meyer; and "Broadway Baby Dolls", also by Bryan and Meyer.[5] Incidental music included "Give My Regards to Broadway" (George M. Cohan), "Vesti La Giubba" (Ruggero Leoncavallo), and "Bridal Chorus (Here Comes the Bride)" (Richard Wagner).

Preservation[]

As was common in the era, a silent version was also prepared for theatres not yet equipped for talkies. Only the sound version survives, as a 16mm reduction positive in the Library of Congress collection, although it has been preserved and is shown occasionally on Turner Classic Movies. The film's trailer also survives incomplete.[6][7][8]

References[]

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  4. "Trianon now Sound Theatre; opens with 'Broadway Babies'". The Birmingham News. September 15, 1929. p. 63. Retrieved September 15, 2020.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  5. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Bradley
  6. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named silentera
  7. Catalog of Holdings The American Film Institute Collection and The United Artists Collection at The Library of Congress p.22 c.1978 by The American Film Institute
  8. Broadway Babies - Trailer - 1929 - Alice White


External links[]

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