Here Come the Girls (1953 film)

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Here Come the Girls
Here Come the Girls - 1953 Poster.jpg
1953 Theatrical Poster
Directed by Claude Binyon
Produced by Bob Hope
Written by Edmund L. Hartmann
Starring Bob Hope, Tony Martin, Arlene Dahl, Rosemary Clooney
Production
company
Hope Productions
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release dates
Los Angeles and New York openings:<templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • October 22, 1953 (1953-10-22)
Running time
multiple edits; 77-78, 86 or 100 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Box office $2 million (US)[1]

Here Come the Girls (1953) is a musical comedy film directed by Claude Binyon, filmed in Technicolor, produced by Bob Hope's company Hope Productions Inc., and released by Paramount Pictures.

Along with Hope, the cast includes Rosemary Clooney, Tony Martin and Arlene Dahl.

Storyline

At the turn of the century, having spent nearly 20 years trying to make it in show business, Stanley Snodgrass is still nothing more than a glorified chorus boy. Inept as ever, he causes an accident during a show that leads to co-stars Irene Bailey and Allen Trent taking a spill on stage.

Over the objections of co-star Daisy Crockett, who loves him, Stanley is fired by Harry Fraser, the show's producer. Stanley returns home, where he still lives with his mother, Emily, and stepfather, Albert, who works in the coal business and has been financing Stanley's show-biz ambitions. A fed-up Albert demands that Stanley find a real job.

"Jack the Slasher," a mysterious murderer, has taken a fancy to Irene. He threatens and then stabs Allen, wounding him, jealously believing Allen to be her lover. Irene is able to identify Jack to a police detective, Dennis Logan. It is proposed that Allen offer himself as bait to bring Jack out of hiding, but when Allen declines, an unsuspecting Stanley is offered $100 a week and a room at the Waldorf to rejoin the show.

Irene pretends to seduce Stanley, who arrogantly gives Daisy the brush. Logan poses as his new valet and knocks out Jack, who disguised as a barber intends to cut Stanley's throat. Jack is arrested and Stanley is once again fired. He takes a job in Albert's coal business, quickly making a mess of things there.

Jack escapes jail. Harry again rehires Stanley, who still is clueless and believes Irene wants him. Daisy overhears the scheme. She warns Stanley, who accuses her of being jealous. On stage during an "Ali Baba" routine, Stanley narrowly misses being killed by Jack, who throws knives from the balcony. Jack disguises himself and joins the act, stabbing Stanley with a knife he's picked up backstage. Stanley is so dim, he doesn't realize it was a harmless prop knife until Daisy tells him. They live happily ever after, although Stanley's incompetence on stage continues to infuriate Harry.

Cast

Production notes

  • Was likely planned for 3-D, film has many of the gimmicks usually seen in a 3D film such as knives being thrown at the screen.
  • Working titles of this film were Girls Are Here to Stay and Champagne for Everybody.
  • Sources conflict about the film's running time. Copyright records list the running time as 100 minutes, or 12 reels, while the Hollywood Reporter review gives the length as 86 minutes and other reviews list it as 77 to 78 minutes. The viewed print ran approximately 77 minutes.[2]

References

  1. 'The Top Box-Office Hits of 1954', Variety Weekly, January 5, 1955
  2. TCM database production notes

External links