Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938) | |
Director(s) | Henry King |
Producer(s) | Harry Joe Brown (associate) |
Top Genres | Drama, Musical, Romance |
Top Topics | San Francisco |
Featured Cast:
Alexander's Ragtime Band Overview:
Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938) was a Musical - Drama Film directed by Henry King and produced by Harry Joe Brown.
SYNOPSIS
A sumptuous showcase for 28 fantastic Berlin tunes. Aristocratic Power flouts family convention and takes up ragtime. He starts a band with composer Ameche and singer Faye. Over the next 30 years, two fall in love, a different two get married, one goes away to war, the band breaks up then gets back together. One of the original and still one of the best "let's put on a show" films of all time. Love, loyalty, fame, jealousy - even duty, honor, and country - all play alongside the spectacular cast in this breathtakingly appointed showbiz epic.
(Source: available at Amazon AMC Classic Movie Companion).
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Academy Awards 1938 --- Ceremony Number 11 (source: AMPAS)
Award | Recipient | Result |
Best Art Direction | Bernard Herzbrun, Boris Leven | Nominated |
Best Film Editing | Barbara McLean | Nominated |
Best Music - Scoring | Alfred Newman | Won |
Best Picture | 20th Century-Fox | Nominated |
Best Writing | Irving Berlin | Nominated |
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Quotes from
Stella Kirby:
You haven't left me with a word to say.
Charlie Dwyer: That's good. People talk too much anyway.
Stella's Sailor freind: So, did you ever learn long division?
Stella Kirby: I never even learned short division!
read more quotes from Alexander's Ragtime Band...
Charlie Dwyer: That's good. People talk too much anyway.
Stella's Sailor freind: So, did you ever learn long division?
Stella Kirby: I never even learned short division!
read more quotes from Alexander's Ragtime Band...
Facts about
"Lux Radio Theater" broadcast a 60 minute radio adaptation of the movie onJune 3, 1940 with Alice Faye reprising her film role.
This was the first time that composer Irving Berlin had worked with Ethel Merman. He told her that he was so impressed with her talent that he would work with her again. He kept that promise and wrote two Broadway shows especially for her: "Annie Get Your Gun" in 1946 and "Call Me Madam" in 1950, the latter of which also starred Merman in the film adaptation: Call Me Madam. Merman also later starred in a film that, like this one, was a cavalcade of Irving Berlin songs, There's No Business Like Show Business.
After the preview in Los Angeles on 24 May 1938, there were sporadic openings across the United States before the national release on 16 August 1938. Some of these were 5 August in New York City, New York; 11 August in Boston, Massachusetts, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and San Francisco, California; 12 August in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Chicago, Illinois and Dallas, Texas; and 13 August in Cleveland, Ohio.
read more facts about Alexander's Ragtime Band...
This was the first time that composer Irving Berlin had worked with Ethel Merman. He told her that he was so impressed with her talent that he would work with her again. He kept that promise and wrote two Broadway shows especially for her: "Annie Get Your Gun" in 1946 and "Call Me Madam" in 1950, the latter of which also starred Merman in the film adaptation: Call Me Madam. Merman also later starred in a film that, like this one, was a cavalcade of Irving Berlin songs, There's No Business Like Show Business.
After the preview in Los Angeles on 24 May 1938, there were sporadic openings across the United States before the national release on 16 August 1938. Some of these were 5 August in New York City, New York; 11 August in Boston, Massachusetts, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and San Francisco, California; 12 August in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Chicago, Illinois and Dallas, Texas; and 13 August in Cleveland, Ohio.
read more facts about Alexander's Ragtime Band...