A fortune in gems is hidden in one of six chairs, and it's up to the prospective heir to find it.A fortune in gems is hidden in one of six chairs, and it's up to the prospective heir to find it.A fortune in gems is hidden in one of six chairs, and it's up to the prospective heir to find it.
Photos
Mae Bacon
- Minor role
- (uncredited)
Harvey Braban
- Detective Jones
- (uncredited)
Ethel Coleridge
- Spinster
- (uncredited)
Syd Crossley
- Bus Conductor
- (uncredited)
Maud Gill
- Fannie Tidmarsh
- (uncredited)
Jimmy Godden
- X-Ray Doctor
- (uncredited)
Mike Johnson
- Mr. O'Flaherty
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaProducer Basil Dean argued against Monty Banks using Binkie Stuart for Florrie's niece, thinking her too young and inexperienced (she had come to fame at age two by winning the "Daily Mail"'s "London's Most Beautiful Baby" competition) to be able to carry off the part believably. The director ignored him, setting the child off on a brief run as the UK's answer to Shirley Temple.
- Goofs"Is that the one?" asks Max of a chair at Dr Wilberforce's surgery - despite the fact that he has already seen one of the set at Madame Louise's vocal school.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Shepperton Babylon (2005)
- SoundtracksKeep Your Seats, Please!
(uncredited)
Written by George Formby, Harry Gifford & Fred E. Cliffe
Performed by George Formby
Featured review
Adapted from same source material as 'The Twelve Chairs', this British version of the tale focuses on a broke young man who has to find out which of his deceased aunt's chairs sold on auction has her precious jewels stashed inside it. Also hot on the case is a well cast Alastair Sim, cunning as ever as the greedy executor of the aunt's estate, as well as a 'friend' set on slowly cheating the trusting main character out of his fortune. Lead actor George Formby is initially hard to warm to with his blatant ignorance to the way the world works (an auction where he keeps outbidding himself is excruciating). As the film progresses though, he becomes a more likable soul as he gets to often show ingenuity, whether it be walking while singing to get one woman away from her chair or ripping a chair at the exact times that a doctor listens to his heart on a stethoscope (arguably the film's funniest scene). Clifford Heatherley is simply hilarious as the bewildered doctor in question who believes that the rip sounds are symptoms of a bad heart. There is also a delightfully zany part in which Formby and his friends disguise a goat and try to take it with them. The conclusion of the movie comes just a little too neat and quickly, but at an economically paced 82 minutes, the film at least never outstays its welcome and there are some memorable songs in the mix too.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 22 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Keep Your Seats, Please! (1936) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer