Step Lively | |
---|---|
Directed by | Tim Whelan |
Written by | Allen Boretz (play) John Murray (play) Warren Duff Peter Milne |
Produced by | Robert Fellows |
Starring | Frank Sinatra George Murphy Adolphe Menjou Gloria DeHaven Walter Slezak Eugene Pallette |
Cinematography | Robert De Grasse |
Edited by | Gene Milford |
Music by | Leigh Harline (uncredited) |
Distributed by | RKO Radio Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 88 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Step Lively is a 1944 American musical film directed by Tim Whelan and starring Frank Sinatra. Step Lively was based on the 1937 play Room Service , by Allen Boretz and John Murray. It was a remake of the 1938 RKO film Room Service, starring the Marx Brothers, Lucille Ball, and Ann Miller.
This article needs an improved plot summary.(November 2022) |
Theatrical producer Gordon Miller is keeping his fingers crossed that his newest play will be a success so that he can pay off his massive hotel bill. Miller and his entire cast can live at the hotel on credit thanks to the generosity of the hotel manager, Joe Gribble, who is Miller's brother-in-law.
Wagner, a company auditor, arrives unexpectedly, as does playwright Glenn Russell, who has left his small town hoping to collect a large amount of (non-existent) royalties on his play. Russell ends up taking a lead musical role in his own production.
Miller suddenly has mixed feelings about his own play, as his girlfriend Christine Marlowe has fallen head-over-heels for playwright Russell; and to break up the romance means sabotaging his own production.
All songs composed by Jule Styne (music) and Sammy Cahn (lyrics).
• Where Does Love Begin? – Performed by Gloria DeHaven, George Murphy and chorus; Reprised by Frank Sinatra and Anne Jeffreys
• Come Out, Come Out, Wherever You Are – Performed by Gloria DeHaven, Frank Sinatra and chorus
• As Long As There's Music – Performed by Frank Sinatra
• Some Other Time – Performed by Frank Sinatra and Gloria DeHaven
• Why Must There Be an Op'ning Song? – Performed by Anne Jeffreys
• Ask the Madame – Performed by George Murphy, Gloria DeHaven and chorus
Bosley Crowther, reviewing for The New York Times , called Step Lively a star vehicle for Frank Sinatra; although the scenes with Sinatra "perceptibly hobble[d] the farce." Crowther compared him unfavorably to Eddie Albert, stating that "when [the remaining cast] are left alone to play 'Room Service' they make this an up-and-coming film." [1]
The film was nominated an Academy Award for Best Art Direction (Albert S. D'Agostino, Carroll Clark, Darrell Silvera, Claude E. Carpenter). [2]
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