Three Cheers for Love | |
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Directed by | Ray McCarey |
Produced by | A.M. Botsford |
Written by | George Marion, Jr. |
Starring |
Eleanore Whitney Robert Cummings William Frawley Elizabeth Patterson Roscoe Karns John Halliday |
Music by |
Phil Boutelje Charles Bradshaw John Leipold |
Cinematography | Harry Fischbeck |
Edited by | Edward Dmytryk |
Production
company |
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Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date
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Running time
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61 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Three Cheers for Love is a 1936 American musical film directed by Ray McCarey and written by George Marion, Jr.. The film stars Eleanore Whitney, Robert Cummings, William Frawley, Elizabeth Patterson, Roscoe Karns and John Halliday. The film was released on June 26, by Paramount Pictures.
The showman Charles Dormant and wife Consuelo decide to send their daughter Sharon, familiarly known as "Skippy," to boarding school. Wilma Chester's school is going broke, so she permits old acquaintance Milton Shakespeare to bring his theatrical troupe to the school and stage a Thanksgiving show, hoping Skippy's dad will attend and offer everyone work in his professional theatrical revues.
Skippy is reluctant to perform until handsome songwriter Jimmy Tuttle changes her mind. She is shocked, however, when her father rejects an invitation to the show, unaware that Consuelo has answered it without showing it to him. Another shock comes when Eve Bronson turns up, claiming Jimmy's about to marry her and only pretending to like Skippy.
Once he learns about the show, Charles is delighted to come. By this time Skippy wants no part of it, but Jimmy carries her to the stage, convinces her to entertain, then drops to one knee and proposes marriage to her.
Frank Nugent of The New York Times said, "There came shyly yesterday to the Roxy Theatre a picture called Three Cheers for Love, and the best we can do is describe it as Hollywood's equivalent of the employes' annual picnic. Paramount—if our inference is correct—must have summoned a select number of its juveniles, praised them for their loyalty to the firm and, as a reward for good behavior, told them they could take a cameraman, director, a few sets and one of the lesser scripts and make a picture all by themselves. We gather that the youngsters enjoyed the picnic, but Paramount has no right to ask us to pay the bill."