The Girl Said No
The Girl Said No

The Girl Said No (1937)

5.5 ? Sep 18, 1937 1h 16m

Overview

Jimmie Allen, a shady bookie, is in love with Pearl Proctor, a greedy dance hall girl. He schemes to get her back after she rejects him; and along the way, he revives a failing Gilbert and Sullivan troupe.

Genres

Comedy Music

Release Date

September 18, 1937

Rating

5.5 /10

Runtime

1h 16m

Robert Armstrong

Robert Armstrong

Jimmie Allen

Irene Hervey

Irene Hervey

Pearl Proctor / Peep-Bo

Paula Stone

Paula Stone

Mabel

Edward Brophy

Edward Brophy

Pick

William Danforth

Howard Hathaway / The Mikado

Vera Ross

Beatrice Hathaway / Katisha

Holmes Herbert

Holmes Herbert

Charles Dillon (scenes deleted)

Richard Tucker

Richard Tucker

Charles Dillon

Harry Tyler

Harry Tyler

Chuck Fairfax

Gwili Andre

Gwili Andre

Gretchen Holman

Josef Swickard

Josef Swickard

Jonesy

Bert Roach

Bert Roach

Sugar Plum

Horace Murphy

Horace Murphy

Joe

Vivian Hart

Beatrice / Pitti-Sing

CinemaSerf avatar

CinemaSerf

6.0/10

Jan 10, 2026

This is another one of those films that is really only part drama and part stage show. This one sees poor old bookie “Jimmie” (Robert Armstrong) get fleeced by aspiring chanteuse “Pearl” (Irene Harvey) before being dumped, broke, from a great height. Having licked his wounds, he decides that vengeance can be sweet as he engages an out of work Gilbert and Sullivan company to lure her back to the stage. Of course, he thinks it will all go suitably pear-shaped, but it actually transpires that just about anything but occurs. Whilst Hervey does fine here, it’s really the blandness of Armstrong that lets this down. He has some of the looks of a Clark Gable but none of the charisma, and even at it’s daftest there just isn’t much chemistry between them, or indeed anyone, as this lumbers along. The last twenty minutes sees some life breathed into some of the “Mikado”, “Pirates of Penz-aunts” and "HMS Pinafore" so if you are a fan of G&S then the lined up bobbies and neatly attired kimono-clad singers do remind us not just of how quirky their works were, but also of just how popular they were with audiences of ordinary theatre goers. No, there’s not much jeopardy from the plot here, but as it moves along gently pointing out the dangers of practical joking it provides us with an amiable enough hour or so.

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