The "6" rating is for the color alone, although a young chap named Tad Alexander is good as the juvenile lead. When his father decides to close the theater because of dwindling business, he persuades him to let him put on a "kiddie show" that will lure patrons.
Tiny tots who were wannabee dancers and singers get to strut their stuff on the stage of a large Palace theater that has hit hard times during the Depression. Actually, these kids are the "Meglin Kiddies," trained at the Meglin studio like so many other show biz kids (including Judy Garland, Shirley Temple and many others). Too bad some of the best are not featured here.
The best feature about this short is the Technicolor photography which is excellent, obviously being "tried out" by Warner Bros. with their Vitaphone shorts. Unfortunately, this can't be said about the primitive sound quality of the songs and the high-pitched wailing of the numbers by kids who were obviously below the talent standards of those who made it big after such training.
Enjoyable only as an example of how good color photography was at the Warner studio in 1935. This means they could easily have filmed such features as "Captain Blood" in the new color process and gotten fine results, if not for the expense of shooting any feature film in color at that time.
Summing up: Worth watching as an antique, but some of these acts would have killed vaudeville.