Tin Pan Alley
Tin Pan Alley

Tin Pan Alley (1940)

5.1 ? Nov 29, 1940 1h 34m

Overview

Songwriters Calhoun and Harrigan get Katie and Lily Blane to introduce a new one. Lily goes to England, and Katy joins her after the boys give a new song to Nora Bayes. All are reunited when the boys, now in the army, show up in England.

Genres

Drama Romance Music

Release Date

November 29, 1940

Rating

5.1 /10

Runtime

1h 34m

Alice Faye

Alice Faye

Katie Blane

Betty Grable

Betty Grable

Lily Blane

Jack Oakie

Jack Oakie

Harry Calhoun

John Payne

John Payne

Skeets Harrigan

Allen Jenkins

Allen Jenkins

Casey

Esther Ralston

Esther Ralston

Nora Bayes

Harold Nicholas

Harold Nicholas

Dancer

Fayard Nicholas

Fayard Nicholas

Dancer

Ben Carter

Ben Carter

Boy

Billy Gilbert

Billy Gilbert

Sheik

John Loder

John Loder

Reggie Carstairs

Elisha Cook Jr.

Elisha Cook Jr.

Joe Codd

Fred Keating

Fred Keating

Harvey Raymond

Lillian Porter

Lillian Porter

Telephone Operator

Princess Vanessa Ammon

Dancer

Betty Brian

Singer

Doris Brian

Singer

Gwen Brian

Singer

Roberts Brothers

Specialty

Tyler Brooke

Tyler Brooke

Bert Melville

CinemaSerf avatar

CinemaSerf

6.0/10

Apr 26, 2022

Songwriters "Calhoun" (Jack Oakie) and his pal "Harrigan" (John Payne) meet up on the theatre circuit with the "Blane" sisters - "Katie" (Alice Faye) and "Lily" (Betty Grable) and they embark on some escapades as the lyricists try to find success. That happens, believe it or not, but as ever there is collateral damage and that comes in the form of the relationship between "Harrigan" and his devoted "Katie" - the former too obsessed with success to appreciate what is right in front of his eyes! Will the romance sort itself out? Well, oddly enough the plot doesn't really matter. It's really just a vehicle for Alice Faye (and her lovely voice) to shine. For Oakie to throw some one-liners around and see where they stick and for charming ditties "You Say the Sweetest Things" and "America, I Love You" from the pens of Mack Gordon and Harry Warren that show a distinct chemistry between Payne and Faye (and Oakie on the former song, too). It's quite fun for the most part, it jogs along well marrying comedy and romance with a little wartime spirit and it does give us an enjoyable insight into just how variety theatre worked. I could have done with a bit more from an underused Grable, and maybe a few more numbers and a bit less chatter, but it's held up well and is still quite entertaining.

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