Our Gang Follies of 1938

Our Gang Follies of 1938
Directed by Gordon Douglas
Produced by Hal Roach
Written by Hal Law
Robert A. McGowan
Norman Blackburn
Charles Rogers[1]
Starring Carl Switzer
George McFarland
Eugene Lee
Darla Hood
Billie Thomas
Henry Brandon
Music by Marvin Hatley
Gioacchino Rossini
Arthur Johnston
Sam Coslow
Cinematography Art Lloyd
Edited by William H. Ziegler
Production
company
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release dates
  • December 18, 1937 (1937-12-18)
Running time
21' 16"
Country United States
Language English
Budget $58,815[2]

Our Gang Follies of 1938 (later reissued as simply Follies of 1938) is a 1937 American musical short subject, the 161st short subject entry in Hal Roach's Our Gang (Little Rascals) series. Directed by Gordon Douglas as a sequel to 1935's Our Gang Follies of 1936, the two-reel short was released to theaters on December 18, 1937 by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

Deriving its title from the concurrent MGM feature film The Broadway Melody of 1938, Our Gang Follies of 1938 is a spoof of the Broadway Melody films and other movie musicals of the time. In the film, Alfalfa (Carl Switzer) decides to quit a pop music revue put on by Spanky (George McFarland) and become an opera singer, famously singing a pastiche song entitled "The Barber of Seville" several times throughout the film. The bulk of the film is made up of a dream sequence, in which Alfalfa imagines himself twenty years later failing as an opera singer, while Spanky owns a Broadway nightclub with a lavish floor show.

Plot

The gang is putting on another big show in Spanky's cellar, complete with an orchestra led by Buckwheat (Billie Thomas), and performances by Darla (Darla Hood) and many of the other neighborhood kids. However, "King of Crooners" Alfalfa (Carl Switzer), the star of the show, crashes the swing music based show with his off-key rendition of "The Barber of Seville", having secretly decided he's going to sing opera from now on. Spanky closes the curtain on Alfalfa and sends out another act to replace him, causing Alfalfa to walk out and take his voice "where it'll be appreciated!"

With Porky (Eugene Lee) accompanying him, Alfalfa turns up at the Cosmopolitan Opera House, wanting to appear in their next opera. Barnaby (Henry Brandon), the Cosmopolitan's impresario, jokingly offers the young boy a contract - provided he come back in twenty years. Elated, Alfalfa returns to Spanky's cellar with Porky, gloating about his presumed good fortune. Spanky tears into him, telling him that "someday I'll be a big producer on Broadway, and you'll be singing your opera in the streets with a tin cup in your hand!"

Alfalfa brushes off Spanky's warnings and falls asleep backstage, dreaming that the twenty years have elapsed and the public is awaiting his debut at Barnaby's opera house. However, Alfalfa is quickly booed by the audience and pelted with rotten vegetables. An angry Barnaby, now a wizened old man, throws Alfalfa out into the New York streets and forces him to sing for pennies in the snow. Hungry and broke, Alfalfa and Porky happen upon "Club Spanky", an ornate nightclub on Broadway, owned by a now-rich Spanky and headlined by the also rich Darla and "Cab Buckwheat".

Inviting them in to see the show, Spanky offers to let Alfalfa and Porky work for him again. Porky immediately accepts, but Alfalfa stubbornly refuses. However, after seeing the floor show starring Darla, Buckwheat, Porky, and a few other performers, Alfalfa is won over and changes his mind. Just as he begins to sing, however, Barnaby appears to drag him back out by the arm to sing in the snow. Alfalfa struggles to release himself from Barnaby's grip while the children chant "We want Alfalfa!"

At this point, Alfalfa awakens to find himself back in Spanky's cellar with the audience continuing to chant in the background. Spanky begs him to join in the last act, and Alfalfa, needing no further convincing, tears up his contract and rushes onstage to sing Bing Crosby's "Learn to Croon" for the show's finale.

Cast

The Gang

Additional cast

Other bit players and dancers

Daniel Boone, Frances Bowling, Tom Braunger, Clarence Calvert, Bill Cody, Jr., John Collum, Bobby Crockett, Patsy Currier, Dix Davis, Tim Davis, Billy Diamond, Verna Dillon, Barry Downing, Billy Eckley, Charline Flanders, Charles Flickinger, David Freeman, Dolores Freymouth, Joe "Corky" Geil, Dorothy Heinrichs, Cordell Hickman, Darryl Hickman, Leon Highby, Paul Hilton, Dorothy "Jackie" Horner, Don Hulbert, Philip Hurlic, Pauline James, Janet Johnson, Darwood Kaye, Rae-Nell Laskey, Susette Laveil, Lorraine Long, Sherrill Luke, Dan Ellen Mabry, Roger McGee, Billy Minderhout, Priscilla Montgomery, Alvin Morris, Cullen Morris, Raymond Rayhill Powell, June Preston, Josephine Roberts, Norman Salling, Douglas Short, Jimmy Sommerville, Nora Rita Stein, Beverly Thomas, Pete Trencalli, Bobs Watson, Helen Westcott, Patricia Wheeler, Camille Williams, Rhoda Williams, Kenneth Wilson, Robert Winkler

Adults

Spanky, Darla, and Alfalfa in the "Club Spanky" dream sequence'

Production

Often pointed out as one of the best entries in the series,[3] Follies of 1938 was produced as a special one-shot return to the series' original two-reel (twenty-minute) format, after a season and a half of shorter one-reel films. In addition, Follies of 1938, particularly its extended dream sequence, features lavish production design and filmmaking typical of feature length MGM musicals.[4] MGM in fact helped finance the short beyond its usual contributions to the Roach shorts; as a result its opening titles read "Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer presents Our Gang Follies of 1938, A Hal Roach Production," as opposed to the usual "Hal Roach Presents Our Gang in..."[4] At a cost of $58 thousand,[2] Follies of 1938 was the most expensive Our Gang short ever produced.[2]

The short's cast includes over one hundred children, as nearly all of the parts in the film (even the "adults" in Alfalfa's dream sequence) are played by kids. The lone exceptions are Henry Brandon's "Barnaby" character (not named onscreen, but named as such in the script),[4] and the other three adults seen at the Cosmopolitan Opera House. Brandon's villainous Barnaby character was re-purposed from another Hal Roach production, Laurel and Hardy's 1934 feature Babes in Toyland.[4] One of the featured singers in Spanky's cellar show is Annabelle Logan, a girl who sings a swing rendition of the traditional Scottish song "The Bonnie Banks o' Loch Lomond". Logan would grow up to become Annie Ross, a successful jazz singer and actress.[5]

Rights

Our Gang Follies of 1938 is one of four sound Our Gang shorts that fell into the public domain after the copyright lapsed in the 1960s (the other three being School's Out, Bear Shooters, and Waldo's Last Stand). As such, these films frequently appear on inexpensive video and/or DVD compilations.

Songs

Songwriters[1] are listed in italics.

  1. "Stagecoach Conversation" (Marvin Hatley) - Buckwheat and His Orchestra (instrumental)
  2. "Follies Introduction/King Alfalfa" (Hatley) - Spanky, Darla, and "Follies" chorus girls
  3. "The Barber of Seville" (Gioacchino Rossini) - Alfalfa
  4. "Pick a Star" (R. Alex. Anderson) - Harmonica Players (Henry Lee and Harold Switzer)
  5. "The Barber of Seville" (Reprise #1) -Gino Corrado and Alfalfa
  6. "Loch Lomond" - Annabelle Logan
  7. "Honolulu Baby" (Hatley) - Buckwheat and his Band (instrumental)
  8. "The Barber of Seville" (Reprise #2) - Alfalfa
  9. "Follow the Leader" (Arthur Morton) - "Cab Buckwheat" and His Orchestra
  10. "The Love Bug Will Get You (If You Don't Watch Out)" (Pinky Tomlin) - Darla, Spanky, Porky, Buckwheat and Georgia Jean LaRue
  11. "That Foolish Feeling" (Harold Adamson, Jimmy McHugh) - Georgia Jean LaRue
  12. "There's No Two Ways About It)" (Harold Adamson, Jimmy McHugh) - Philip MacMahon and Ensemble
  13. "Learn to Croon" (Arthur Johnston, Sam Coslow) - Alfalfa
  14. "Follies Conclusion" (Hatley) - Alfalfa, Spanky, Darla, Porky, Harold Switzer, Henry Lee, Gloria Browne, Gloria Hurst, and Laura June Williams

See also

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 Demoss, Robert (9 November 2008). "The Lucky Corner: Our Gang Follies of 1938". Retrieved 19 November 2008..
  2. 1 2 3 Maltin, Leonard and Bann, Richard W. (1977, rev. 1992). The Little Rascals: The Life and Times of Our Gang, p. 238. New York: Crown Publishing/Three Rivers Press. ISBN 0-517-58325-9
  3. Erickson, Hal (2007). "Review of Our Gang Follies of 1938". Allmovie. Retrieved January 24, 2007.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Maltin and Bann. (1977, rev. 1992). p. 187-189.
  5. Maltin and Bann. (1977, rev. 1992). p. 278.
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