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Babes on Broadway

Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland reunite in this vibrant musical directed by Busby Berkeley. Thwarted in their attempts to break into the big time, showbiz wannabes Tommy Williams (Rooney) and Penny Morris (Garland) decide to stage their own Broadway production. Songs include "(I Like New York in June) How About You" and a selection of send-ups of performances by musical sensations -- including Rooney's hilarious Carmen Miranda imitation.

  • Released January 1, 1942
  •   1 hr 58 mins  

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Needs 5 more ratings
  • 6.7 out of 10
    369 votes
  • 3.5 out of 5
    3,477 votes

Nominated for 1 Oscar.   See all awards »

Cast & Crew

Director

Busby Berkeley

Producer

Arthur Freed producer

Writers

Fred Finklehoffe screenplay
Fred Finklehoffe story

Cast

Mickey Rooney Tommy 'Tom' Williams
Judy Garland Penny Morris
Fay Bainter Miss 'Jonesy' Jones
Virginia Weidler Barbara Josephine 'Jo' Conway
Ray McDonald Ray Lambert
Richard Quine Morton 'Hammy' Hammond
Donald Meek Mr. Stone
Alexander Woollcott Himself - Town Cryer Radio Show
Luis Alberni Nick
James Gleason Thornton Reed, Theatrical Producer

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Reviews

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Other Reviews

 

prosper54-1 wrote on IMDB:

To get an idea of just how talented a performer Mickey Rooney is, watch his banjo playing in the movie's final number, The Robert E. Lee. At first you may think he's just going through the motions, but he's actually playing the banjo for the last 3 minutes of the movie. His dance numbers are also superb.He was at the height of his popularity when this 1941 movie came out, the #1 Box Office Male Star for 6 years in a row. To say this movie is too sugary, is a cheap shot and you must put it into perspective of when it was made. (The black face number at the end was far from sugary). Rooney dances and imitates Cagney in Yankee Doodle; He does a perfect impersonation of Carmen Miranda in another number and the finale is worth the price of admission. Corny, yes. Talented? precisely.

Written on IMDB a long time ago.
 

apir51 wrote on IMDB:

This is one of those Hollywood 'Let's put on a show!' movies that were so popular in that bygone era. Such ha sense of sadness, though, when you realize that so many of the stars died young(Judy Garland-47, Ray McDonald-34, Virginia Weidler-41). Mickey Rooney, always a little high-strung, outdoes himself here, as he seems a 78RPM record, while everyone else is moving at 33 1/3. The minstrel number at the end is really quite embarrassing by today's standards, but it was the sort of thing they could get away with in those days. Quite a few of the standard 'view from above' shots common in Busby Berkeley films. I found it interesting as a look back at a bygone time that never really was.

Written on IMDB a long time ago.
 

Neil Doyle wrote on IMDB:

This big MGM "let's put on a show" musical is obviously a showcase for the over-sized talents of JUDY GARLAND and MICKEY ROONEY.

But it amuses me to see young commentators expressing "shock" and dismay at the blackface routines shown in the big finale. They never knew how popular minstrel shows were, even into the 1940s? Where have they have been living? They never heard of Al Jolson and how he rode to stardom on his blackface routines?

The film actually rises above its clichéd plot whenever Judy takes the spotlight with a song. Never has she looked so radiantly youthful and vibrant. Rooney, while of course obviously talented, tends to ham it up a bit too much whenever he's given the spotlight, which is a little too often for my taste. Fay Bainter does nicely as a patron of the arts while James Gleason gets on the nerves with his frustrated bit as a producer.   [ show more ]

Written on IMDB a long time ago.

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