GOLD DIGGERS OF 1933


'''Gold Diggers of 1933''' is an American musical film directed by Mervyn LeRoy with choreography by Busby Berkeley.[1] It stars Ruby Keeler, Ginger Rogers, Joan Blondell, Aline MacMahon and Dick Powell. The story is based on the very successful Technicolor musical comedy ''Gold Diggers of Broadway'', which had been the biggest box office hit of 1929.

Contents
Plot
Musical sequences
Cast
Awards
External links

Plot


The central characters are four aspiring actresses: Polly the ingenue (Keeler), Carol the torch singer (Blondell), Trixie the comedienne (MacMahon) and Fay the glamourpuss (Rogers). The film was made in 1933 at the nadir of the Great Depression and contains numerous direct references to it.
The film begins with a rehearsal for a stage show featuring the song "We're in the Money" (sung by Rogers), which is subsequently broken up by the producer's creditors who close down the theatre due to unpaid bills.
At the unglamorous apartment shared by three of the four starlets (Polly, Carol, and Trixie), the producer, Barney Hopkins (Ned Sparks), is in despair. Then he encounters Brad Roberts (Powell), their neighbour, and lover of Polly. Brad is a brilliant composer and singer and has not only written music for a show, but also provides Hopkins with $15,000 in cash to support it.
The show goes into production, but the girls are suspicious that Brad must be a criminal since he is cagey about his past. It transpires, however, that he is in fact a millionaire's son whose family does not want him associating with the theatre. Brad is then forced to play the lead role on stage when the original actor drops out (and we see an extremely suggestive-for-its-time musical number, "Petting in the Park", featuring a lecherous midget played by Billy Barty). Because of the resulting publicity, Brad's brother, J. Lawrence Bradford (Warren William) and the family lawyer, Fanuel H. Peabody (Guy Kibbee) discover what he is doing, and arrive in New York to prevent him from being seduced by "gold diggers."
Lawrence however mistakenly assumes that Carol is actually Polly, his brother's fiancée, and his heavy-handed effort to dissuade the "cheap and vulgar" showgirl from marrying Brad by buying her off annoys her so much that she goes along with the gag in order to eventually pull the rug out from under him. Trixie meanwhile targets Fanuel as the perfect rich sap ripe for exploitation. But what starts as gold-digging turns into something else, and when the dust settles, Carol and Lawrence are in love and Trixie marries Fanuel, while Brad is free to marry Polly after all. All the "gold diggers" (except Fay) therefore end up married to wealthy men.
The film concludes with Brad singing "Shadow Waltz", followed by Carol singing "Remember My Forgotten Man" a song about the poor treatment of war veterans, in a set that depicts the poverty of the Depression.

Musical sequences


The film contains four song and dance sequences choregraphed by Busby Berkeley.
"We're in the Money" is sung by Ginger Rogers accompanied by scantily-clad showgirls dancing with giant coins. Rogers sings one verse in Pig Latin.
"Pettin' in the Park" is sung by Ruby Keeler and Dick Powell. It includes a tap dance from Keeler and a surreal sequence featuring dwarf actor Billy Barty as a baby who escapes from his stroller.
"The Shadow Waltz" is sung by Powell and Keeler. It features a dance by Keeler, Rogers, and many female violinists with neon-tubed violins that glow in the dark.
"Remember My Forgotten Man" (sung by Joan Blondell and Etta Moten) features sets influenced by German Expressionism and a gritty evocation of Depression-era poverty.

Cast



Warren William as Lawrence Bradford

Joan Blondell as Carol King

Aline MacMahon as Trixie Lorraine

Ruby Keeler as Polly Parker

Dick Powell as Brad Roberts

Guy Kibbee as Faneul H. Peabody

Ned Sparks as Barney Hopkins

Ginger Rogers as Fay Fortune

Awards


'Nominations'

Academy Awards: Oscar; Best Sound, Recording, Nathan Levinson (sound director); 1934.
'Other distinguishments'

★ In 2003 the film was selected for preservation by the United States National Film Registry.

External links



★ .

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