| George White's Scandals | |
|---|---|
| Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | George White |
| Screenplay by | Jack Yellen |
| Story by | George White Robert Kane |
| Produced by | George White |
| Starring | Rudy Vallée Jimmy Durante Alice Faye Adrienne Ames Gregory Ratoff Cliff Edwards Dixie Dunbar |
| Cinematography | Lee Garmes George Schneiderman |
| Edited by | Paul Weatherwax |
| Music by | David Buttolph Hugo Friedhofer |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | Fox Film Corporation |
Release date |
|
Running time | 80 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
George White's Scandals is a 1934 American pre-Code musical film directed by George White and written by Jack Yellen. The film stars Rudy Vallée, Jimmy Durante, Alice Faye, Adrienne Ames, Gregory Ratoff, Cliff Edwards and Dixie Dunbar. [1] [2] [3] The film was released on March 16, 1934, by Fox Film Corporation. George White also produced George White's Scandals for RKO in 1945. It was directed by Felix E. Feist and starred Joan Davis and Jack Haley.
This article needs a plot summary.(October 2015) |
The film was a box office disappointment for Fox. [4]
James Francis Durante was an American comedian, actor, singer, and pianist. His distinctive gravelly speech, Lower East Side accent, comic language-butchery, jazz-influenced songs, and prominent nose helped make him one of the United States' most familiar and popular personalities of the 1920s through the 1970s. He often referred to his nose as the schnozzola, and the word became his nickname.
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George White's Scandals were a long-running string of Broadway revues produced by George White that ran from 1919–1939, modeled after the Ziegfeld Follies. The "Scandals" launched the careers of many entertainers, including W. C. Fields, the Three Stooges, Ray Bolger, Helen Morgan, Ethel Merman, Ann Miller, Eleanor Powell, Bert Lahr and Rudy Vallée. Louise Brooks, Dolores Costello, Barbara Pepper, and Alice Faye got their show business start as lavishly dressed chorus girls strutting to the "Scandal Walk". Much of George Gershwin's early work appeared in the 1920–24 editions of Scandals. The Black Bottom, danced by Ziegfeld Follies star Ann Pennington and Tom Patricola, touched off a national dance craze.
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