Fri 28 Apr 2017
A Movie Review by Dan Stumpf: SING AND LIKE IT (1934).
Posted by Steve under Films: Comedy/Musicals , Reviews[4] Comments
SING AND LIKE IT. RKO, 1934. Nat Pendleton, Zasu Pitts, Edward Everett Horton, Pert Kelton, Ned Sparks and John Qualen. Written by Aben Kandel and Marion Dix. Directed by William A. Seiter.
Sometimes in Hollywood they gave the stars a day off and turned the character actors loose on a movie, generally with happy results, and this is one of the happiest.
Nat Pendleton stars as a tough gang boss (“Youse guys are way down on yer kidnappin’s. And the Safecrackin’s off too.â€) married to a restless showgirl (Pert Kelton at her sharpest and sexiest). Early on, while cracking a safe in a Bank building, he overhears the Amateur Dramatic Society rehearsing their show and is captivated by Zasu Pitts singing an ode to Mother Love.
You can probably see it coming from here, but I’ll go on to say that Nat decides Zasu should go to the Big Time with a moving song like this, so he moves her into his penthouse, chaperoned by Ms Kelton — which is a bit like appointing John Waters to the Catholic Legion of Decency — and muscles in on Broadway’s leading impresario, played here by Edward Everett Horton.
These four play off each other like tennis pros doing mixed doubles: Pendleton’s genial ogre slamming up against Horton’s urbane jellyfish; Zasu’s innocence fluttering up against Pert Kelton’s sharp edges, and all of this propelled by a sharp script and brisk direction. I particularly enjoyed the bit where Pendleton decides the jokes in this show ain’t no good and has his boys write some… followed up many scenes later with the reaction of New York’s drama critics.
As if this weren’t enough, Sing is graced with the mugs of familiar character actors like Roy D’Arcy, Joe Sawyer, Paul Hurst and Bob Kortman. We also get Ned Sparks’ savage deadpan and a delightful John Qualen, perfectly cast as the lady’s wimpy beau.
There’s an interesting subtext here: Ms Pitts assumes that all show-people and gangsters are hell-bound degenerates and that sooner or later she will have to sacrifice her innocence for the sake of her art. And while she’s not exactly averse to the idea, there’s a charming moment when John Qualen declares, “I’ll still love you Annie — no matter how steeped in sin you are.â€
Come to think of it, this is a film full of charming moments, all of them served up with agreeable verve by a troupe of players obviously enjoying their time in the spotlight, and making things a lot of fun for the viewer. Catch it if you can.
April 28th, 2017 at 6:18 pm
Sounds like a must-see for character actor fans. And any movie with Ned Sparks is aces with me.
April 28th, 2017 at 7:06 pm
Back in 1957 or thereabouts, RKO tried to stay in business by licensing its entire film library for television.
The company that won the job was the C&C Super Corporation, a Texas-based variety store chain with no real knowledge of film history (or much else, comes to that).
C&C’s “coup” was to lease the whole Movietime USA package to stations for use in perpetuity. The first buyer was the ABC Network owned-and-operated stations, which continued to program RKO oldies at odd hours well into the ’90s, with the beeping RKO tower scrapped in favor of C&C’s logo.
All RKO titles – Citizen Kane, King Kong, Wheeler & Woolsey, Brown & Carney, Val Lewton, everything – ran constantly on channel 7 here in Chicago, from my childhood to alost the present day (this situation continued even after Turner Classic got the RKO rights for restoration back at its outset).
I first really saw Sing And Like It one day in the ’60s, when I was home from school; it was ch7’s Noon Movie. Mom watched with my brother and me, pointing out the characters for us, with emphasis on the ones who were still around appearing on TV.
WE got a kick out of Ned Sparks translating Edward Everett Horton for Nat Pendleton:
“The gentleman says nertz.”
When Dad got home that night, Mom told him about the movie we’d seen at lunchtime, mentioning the all-star cast.
Dad asked, “Was it a talkie?”
A real family bonding moment, I’d say …
April 29th, 2017 at 1:03 am
This sounds like a small gem of a movie that I’m sure I’d have passed over if I’d have ever come across it without reading your review, Dan. Thanks!
And thanks to you, Mike, for another wonderful tale of your past and your family’s TV set. I have fond memories of the same, but not nearly as many interesting stories.
May 1st, 2017 at 2:36 am
Goes on the must see list, thanks Dan.