Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaCarny con artist and snake-oil salesman Eustace McGargle tries to stay one step ahead of the sheriff but is completely devoted to his beloved daughter Poppy.Carny con artist and snake-oil salesman Eustace McGargle tries to stay one step ahead of the sheriff but is completely devoted to his beloved daughter Poppy.Carny con artist and snake-oil salesman Eustace McGargle tries to stay one step ahead of the sheriff but is completely devoted to his beloved daughter Poppy.
- Countess Maggi Tubbs DePuizzi
- (as Catharine Doucet)
- Carnival sword swallower
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- Boy
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- Bit part
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- Young woman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Gardener
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- Bartender
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- BIT part
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Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizWhile filming the movie, W.C. Fields regularly drank from a flask, which he insisted was only "pineapple juice." One day, however, the stagehands replaced the vodka in the flask with real pineapple juice. When Fields tasted it, he sputtered and shouted, "Who put pineapple juice in my pineapple juice?!"
- Citazioni
Hot dog vendor: [as McGargle and Poppy begin to eat their hot dogs] Twenty cents, please!
Professor Eustace McGargle: Very reasonable! I'll pay you at the conclusion of our engagement.
Hot dog vendor: Oh, no, you won't! You're gonna pay me right now!
Professor Eustace McGargle: [the vendor takes back Poppy's half-eaten hot dog] Really! I shall return mine also.
Hot dog vendor: [looking at McGargle's half-eaten hot dog] Listen, you tramp, how am I gonna sell these again?
Professor Eustace McGargle: First you insult me. Then you ask my advice concerning salesmanship. You, sir, are a dunce! DUNCE, sir! D-U-N-C... How do you spell it?
[Walking away with Poppy]
Professor Eustace McGargle: Come, dear, let's go.
- Curiosità sui creditiThe film opens with a shot of a flower blooming, with the title "Poppy" emerging from the flower as it blooms. The flower motif continues through the rest of the opening credits.
- ConnessioniFeatured in W.C. Fields: Straight Up (1986)
- Colonne sonorePoppy
(1936) (uncredited)
Music by Friedrich Hollaender (as Frederck Hollander)
Lyrics by Sam Coslow
Played during the opening credits and Sung by an unidentified chorus
This version of Poppy has Fields with daughter Rochelle Hudson as part of a traveling carnival that stops in one of the small towns where she falls for the son of the mayor Granville Bates. The son is played by Richard Cromwell. She falls hard too, but Fields see an opportunity for a really big con by passing her off as the daughter of one of the town's leading citizens who left and married a carnival man years ago and left a daughter unaccounted for.
There's a rival claimant in Catherine Doucet who was a cousin of the heiress and she's being stage managed by Lynne Overman as shrewdly as Fields is doing for his daughter. I can't say more, but some unexpected facts come to everyone's attention in the end.
The original story of Poppy was written by Dorothy Donnelly who collaborated with many folks, most prominently Sigmund Romberg as a lyric writer. The original show on Broadway had a full blown score with a bunch of composers all writing songs with lyrics by Donnelly and she wrote the book as well. None of which were used in this film.
Fields is a bit more serious in this part than he normally is, still there are enough Fields type situations to satisfy his fans. What was interesting is that he was being equally matched by Doucet and Overman in chicanery.
Poppy is a much dated old fashioned story, but with W.C. Fields even a somewhat muted Fields it still rates a look.
- bkoganbing
- 5 giu 2011
- Permalink
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