Show Boat
Born Today
Home / Show Boat

Show Boat

Year:
Duration:
113 min
Genres:
Comedy | Drama | Musical | Romance
IMDB rate:
7.8
Director:
James Whale
Awards:
1 win & 1 nomination
Details
Country: USA
Release Date: 1936-05-17
Filming Locations: Backlot, Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, California, USA
Cast
Actor
Character
Irene Dunne
Magnolia
Allan Jones
Gaylord Ravenal
Charles Winninger
Cap'n Andy Hawks
Paul Robeson
Joe
Helen Morgan
Julie
Helen Westley
Parthy Ann Hawks
Queenie Smith
Elly May Chipley
Sammy White
Frank Schultz
Donald Cook
Steve Baker
Hattie McDaniel
Queenie
Francis X. Mahoney
Rubber Face
Marilyn Knowlden
Kim (as a Child)
Sunnie O'Dea
Kim (at Sixteen)
Arthur Hohl
Pete
Charles Middleton
Vallon
J. Farrell MacDonald
Windy
Clarence Muse
Janitor
Maude Allen
Fat Woman (uncredited)
Ricca Allen
Old Woman (uncredited)
William Alston
Young Man (uncredited)
Eddie 'Rochester' Anderson
Young Black Man (uncredited)
Harry Barris
Jake - Pianist (uncredited)
Patricia Barry
Kim Ravenal as a Baby
May Beatty
Mrs. O' Brien
Brooks Benedict
Race Fan (uncredited)
Barbara Bletcher
Fat Girl (uncredited)
Mary Bovard
Daughter (uncredited)
Donald Briggs
Press Agent (uncredited)
Betty Brown
First Girl (uncredited)
Daisy Bufford
Maid in Chicago (uncredited)
James P. Burtis
Soldier (uncredited)
Eddy Chandler
Gambler (uncredited)
E.E. Clive
London Producer (uncredited)
Edmund Cobb
Gambler (uncredited)
Maxine Cook
Thin Girl (uncredited)
D'Arcy Corrigan
Small Role (uncredited)
Grace Cunard
Mother (uncredited)
J. Gunnis Davis
Doctor at Kim's Birth (uncredited)
Anna Demetrio
Mother (uncredited)
Helen Dickson
Small Role (uncredited)
Jeanette Dickson
Chorus Girl (uncredited)
Elspeth Dudgeon
Mother Superior (uncredited)
Helen Jerome Eddy
Reporter Interviewing in Rehearsal (uncredited)
Kathleen Ellis
Girl #2 (uncredited)
Al Ferguson
Gambler (uncredited)
Stanley Fields
Backwoodsman with Gun (uncredited)
Artye Folz
Fat Girl (uncredited)
June Glory
Girl #3 (uncredited)
Dorothy Granger
New Year's Eve Cutie (uncredited)
Marilyn Harris
Little Girl (uncredited)
Helen Hayward
Mrs. Brecenbridge (uncredited)
Ernest Hilliard
Race Fan (uncredited)
Arthur Housman
Drunk (uncredited)
Jimmy Jackson
Young Man (uncredited)
Selmer Jackson
Hotel Clerk (uncredited)
Matthew Jones
Bartender at Trocadero (uncredited)
Jane Keckley
Mrs. Ewing (uncredited)
Isabel La Mal
Companion (uncredited)
Jack Latham
Juvenile (uncredited)
Frank Mayo
Gambler (uncredited)
Martha Merrill
Long-Legged Girl (uncredited)
Monte Montague
Old Man (uncredited)
Jack Mulhall
Race Fan (uncredited)
Harold Nelson
Postmaster (uncredited)
Georgia O'Dell
School Teacher (uncredited)
Dennis O'Keefe
Blackface Dancer (uncredited)
Patti Patterson
Banjo Player (uncredited)
Edward Peil Sr.
Gambler (uncredited)
Barbara Pepper
New Year's Eve Cutie (uncredited)
Lee Phelps
Gambler (uncredited)
LeRoy Prinz
Dance Director at Rehearsal (uncredited)
George Reed
Old Black Man (uncredited)
Tom Ricketts
Minister (uncredited)
Donna Mae Roberts
New Year's Eve Party Extra (uncredited)
Betty Roche
Tall Girl (uncredited)
Alma Ross
Chorus Girl (uncredited)
Tiny Sandford
Zebe - Backwoodsman (uncredited)
Forrest Stanley
New York Theatre Manager (uncredited)
Mary Stewart
Singer / Dancer (uncredited)
Maidel Turner
Mother (uncredited)
Lois Verner
Small Girl (uncredited)
Harold Waldridge
Office Boy (uncredited)
Marguerite Warner
Young Girl (uncredited)
Billy Watson
Boy (uncredited)
Delmar Watson
Boy (uncredited)
Harry Watson
Boy (uncredited)
Lloyd Whitlock
Gambler Speaking to Sheriff (uncredited)
Renee Whitney
New Year's Eve Cutie (uncredited)
Frank Whitson
Dealer (uncredited)
Charles C. Wilson
Jim Green
Did you know?
Trivia
Helen Morgan has played Julie in the original 1927-1929 Broardway production, as well as in the 1932.
Share this
The cost of production for the movie was more than Universal Studios could afford. Head of the studio, Carl Laemmle Jr., had to borrow money to finish the picture and to keep the studio afloat. When he reneged on an agreement to repay the loan, Universal Studios was taken over by a New York City lending institution. Laemmle Jr. lost his position at the studio his father had started and never again worked in Hollywood.
Share this
Universal Pictures' head Carl Laemmle was ousted from the company just after this film was completed. He retired from the business the day after its release, as did his 28-year-old son, who never produced another film.
Share this
Goofs
At one point in the story, Cap'n Andy and Parthy discuss hiring a new leading man and leading lady. Just before Cap'n Andy says, "But where do we go from here? We can't give no more shows without a leading man !" he and Parthy are abruptly seen in a slightly different position.
Share this
When Joe rows the doctor across the stormy waters, the doctor upbraids him for getting him out of bed under false pretenses. In answer, Joe sings a line from "Ah Still Suits Me", but his lip movements don't quite match the sound of his voice.
Share this
At the end of "Ol' Man River", Joe smiles while his and the male chorus's voices linger for about three seconds on the soundtrack.
Share this
Quotes
Gaylord Ravenal: [singing] Who cares if my boat goes upstream? Or if the gale bids me go with the river's flow? I drift along with my fancy; sometimes I thank my lucky stars my heart is free...
Share this
Parthy: Mercy! Something must be on fire the way Queenie's running
Share this
Mother: Did you understand the moral of the play, my dear?
Share this
Faq
Q
This version of "Show Boat" is supposed to be extremely faithful to the stage musical. What changes have been made?
A
Three new songs were written for the film by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II, the show's original creators. There is also, instead of the Chicago World's Fair scene which begins Act II in the stage version, a new sequence that occurs right after the third new song, in which Magnolia's baby is about to be born and there is no doctor to be found. Meanwhile, Ravenal (Allan Jones) is away gambling rather than at his wife's bedside, and the boat's deckhand Joe (Paul Robeson) grabs a raincoat, goes in search of a doctor, finds him, and rows him back to the show boat - all this during a fierce storm.There is also a new conversation between Cap'n Andy and Parthy shortly after Magnolia and Ravenal have moved to Chicago that is not in the play. In the conversation, we find out that Ravenal and Magnolia have moved to a smaller residence after living in a fancy hotel, but we are left to find out why later on.There are a few other transitions that have been added to the film which were not in the original show. Scene 3 of the original 1927 stage production took place outside a saloon and originally featured two musical numbers - "Life Upon the Wicked Stage" and "Till Good Luck Comes My Way"; these are heard instrumentally in this film later although they aren't sung, but much of the dialogue of this scene (which in the film takes place inside the saloon) is retained. The new transitions include a couple of moments written by Oscar Hammerstein II for the film - one in which we hear the conversation of the crowd filing out of the boat's auditorium after a show has ended, and one which shows them filing in while a child not allowed to see the show cries for his mother. (Around his neck is a misspelled lettered sign saying "In kase [sic] I get lost, my parents are...etc.")A new conversation, potentially considered offensive by modern standards, was written for Joe and Queenie (Hattie McDaniel), who are black. It takes place just after Joe first appears, before the lead-in dialogue to the song "Ol' Man River". Queenie berates Joe for being a "slowpoke" and not bringing the flour that she needs for baking the bread fast enough; she calls him a "lazy good-for nothing", which Joe takes very good-humoredly. Queenie then takes the flour, calls Joe "the laziest thing that ever lived on this river'' (to which Joe replies mysteriously "That's sayin' a whole lot") . Queenie then goes back into the boat while Joe remains outside on the wharf. Then we return to the dialogue in the original stage version, and the conversation between Joe and Magnolia (Irene Dunne) that leads into "Ol' Man River". Some of Queenie and Joe's conversation was incorporated by Oscar Hammerstein II into Act Two, Scene Seven of the 1946 stage revival of "Show Boat", and it has remained in that scene ever since (except in the 1994 Harold Prince revival of the show).The last sequence of the film (which covers the final ten minutes) is quite different from the one in the show because it takes place in New York rather than on the Mississippi River, although we still do get to hear Ravenal and Magnolia reprise "You Are Love" and Joe reprise "Ol' Man River" at the end. In the original show, we do not get to see Magnolia and Ravenal's daughter Kim (played as an adult in the 1936 film by Sunnie O'Dea and as a child by Marilyn Knowlden) make her debut as a leading lady on the Broadway stage as we do in the film. In the final scene of the stage version, we learn that Kim has already become a leading lady on Broadway and is returning to the show boat with her mother for a reunion secretly arranged by Cap'n Andy. When they arrive, Magnolia encounters Ravenal on the levee and the two are reconciled. In the 1936 film, the two are reconciled at the Broadway theatre where Ravenal has been working as a doorman and where Kim is making her starring debut.Despite what sounds like extensive rewriting from the previous description, only about twenty minutes of the original show are actually changed. Otherwise, the storyline and even most of the dialogue of this film version is exactly that of the original show, and nearly all of the scenes retained from the show are sequenced in exactly the same order as they are in the stage version. The only scenes which have been switched around are the one in the convent school hallway, and the Trocadero rehearsal scene - onstage the rehearsal scene comes first. However, the dialogue and the singing for both scenes is still the same. As in the show, the story covers a period of roughly forty years, from the late nineteenth century to the early twentieth century. Aside from the three additional songs, Joe and Queenie's two new dialogue scenes, Cap'n Andy and Parthy's new conversation, and the new final sequence, the 1936 film follows the show nearly word-for-word, although edits have been made to the script to fit it all into a two-hour length, rather than three hours as on stage. All of the revisions and additions have been made by Oscar Hammerstein II, the show's original librettist, and not by some little-known screenwriter.The film features a total of thirteen songs, not counting all the reprises and instrumental renditions of some of the numbers. The original show featured a total of nineteen different numbers, not counting the reprises. (Reprises are similar to encores, except that sometimes the lyrics of the song being reprised are changed to fit whatever situation is going on in the show at the moment.)
Share this
Photos from cast
Bobs Watson
microphone clipart png micro white microphone clipart Microphone