The Dolly Sisters (film)
The Dolly Sisters | |
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File:The Dolly Sisters.jpg
Theatrical poster
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Directed by | Irving Cummings |
Produced by | George Jessel |
Written by | John Francis Larkin Marian Spitzer |
Starring | Betty Grable June Haver John Payne |
Music by | Alfred Newman Cyril J. Mockridge Charles E. Henderson David Buttolph |
Cinematography | Ernest Palmer |
Edited by | Barbara McLean |
Distributed by | Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation |
Release dates
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November 14, 1945 |
Running time
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114 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $4 million (US/ Canada rentals) [1][2] |
The Dolly Sisters is a 1945 American Technicolor biographical film about the Dolly Sisters, identical twins who became famous as entertainers on Broadway and in Europe in the early years of the twentieth century Jennie and Rosie Dolly, Hungarian-born entertainers. It starred Betty Grable as Jenny, June Haver as Rosie and John Payne as Harry Fox.
Contents
Plot
In 1904, Uncle Latsie (S. Z. Sakall) comes to New York from Hungary with two little nieces, who immediately take to cafe dancing. In 1912, they're still at it, but to pay Uncle's card debts they decide to go into vaudeville. On the way to a show they meet another up and coming act, a singer by the name of Harry Fox (John Payne). They get to know him and eventually Jenny falls in love with him. He later schemes to get them an audition with the great Hammerstein. Harry then struggles to obtain his own success while, the sisters fame rises. Sister Rosie is distrustful of Harry but Jenny dates him anyway. Finally one evening, he sings to Jenny the latest song he has composed. A producer hears it and gives him the break he's been waiting for. Jenny and Harry get married but just as success comes to Harry, and they settle down to domestic bliss, war in Europe breaks out and he enlists much to the sadness of Jenny. At the same time her sister persuades her to take an engagement with the Folies Bergere in Paris. As they tour part of Europe and achieve more success and admirers, the war comes to an end. Harry comes back to Jenny and asks her to come home but her sister asks her to stay with the show. Jenny can't decide. She then goes to the train depot to convince Harry to stay while her show ends but he gets mad and insinuates there should be a divorce. The Dolly sisters continue their tour of Europe and Jenny takes to gambling and steadily dates one of her wealthy suitors. Sister Rosie, by now is secretly engaged to her American boyfriend who owns some department stores in the U.S. Now she plans to leave the act but Jenny overhears this and decides to accept a marriage proposal. As they drive away from a party, to get married, Jenny is overwrought by memories of Harry and ends up crashing the car. Harry who just got engaged to Leonora Baldwin, hears of this accident and shows his concern. After several months of recovering in a french hospital Jenny returns to New York. During a benefit show she and Rosie unite again as Dolly Sisters. Harry, who also performs, meets them and introduces Leonora to Jenny. Realizing that Harry still loves Jenny, Leonora leaves the theater during Harry's act. On the stage Jenny and later Rosie join Harry to finish his number.
Cast
- Betty Grable as Yansci "Jenny" Dolly
- John Payne as Harry Fox
- June Haver as Rozsika "Rosie" Dolly
- S. Z. Sakall as Uncle "Latsie" (a nickname for László)
- Reginald Gardiner as Tony, Duke of Breck
- Frank Latimore as Irving Netcher
- Gene Sheldon as Professor Winnup, seal trainer
- Sig Ruman as Ignatz Tsimmis
- Trudy Marshall as Lenora Baldwin
References
- ↑ "All-Time Top Grossers", Variety, 8 January 1964 p 69
- ↑ https://archive.org/stream/variety163-1946-09#page/n180/mode/1up/search/%22top+grossers%22
External links
- The Dolly Sisters at the TCM Movie Database
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). The Dolly Sisters at IMDb
- The Dolly Sisters at AllMovie
- The Dolly Sisters at the American Film Institute Catalog
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- Pages with broken file links
- English-language films
- 1945 films
- 1940s biographical films
- 1940s musical films
- 1940s romantic drama films
- 20th Century Fox films
- American films
- American biographical films
- American musical films
- American romantic drama films
- Biographical films about entertainers
- Films directed by Irving Cummings
- Romantic musical films
- Biographical film stubs
- Romantic musical film stubs