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On the Avenue

When smooth-talking actor Gary Blake (Dick Powell) appears in a new play on Broadway that pokes fun at a wealthy, well-known family, he ends up attracting one of the clan's pretty daughters, Mimi (Madeleine Carroll), much to the displeasure of his onstage sidekick (Alice Faye). This classic Hollywood musical features a score by Irving Berlin, including the songs "(Let's Go) Slumming on Park Avenue" and "This Year's Kisses."

  • Released February 12, 1937
  •   1 hr 29 mins  

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Ratings

mr fluffy
Needs 5 more ratings
  • 7.2 out of 10
    168 votes
  • 3 out of 5
    1,133 votes

This movie has not won and has not been nominated for any awards.

Cast & Crew

Director

Roy Del Ruth

Producer

Gene Markey associate producer

Writers

Irving Berlin story, uncredited
Eddie Cherkose contributing writer, uncredited

Cast

Dick Powell Gary Blake
Madeleine Carroll Mimi Caraway
Alice Faye Mona Merrick
The Ritz Brothers Themselves
George Barbier Commodore Caraway
Alan Mowbray Frederick Sims
Cora Witherspoon Aunt Fritz
Walter Catlett Jake Dibble
Douglas Fowley Eddie Eads
Joan Davis Miss Katz - Dibble's Secretary

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Reviews

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Other Reviews

 

bkoganbing wrote on IMDB:

Alice Faye's movie career was just getting into high gear when she did this gem in 1937. The Irving Berlin score is among the best he ever wrote for the screen and Alice does well with Let's Go Slumming on Park Avenue and This Year's Kisses. The former is somewhat autobiographical for her as Alice Faye was brought up in Hell's Kitchen and she sings it against a Hell's Kitchen background.

In her early career at 20th Century Fox, Darryl Zanuck had a problem with finding someone who could sing opposite her. The only one available on the lot was Don Ameche. Zanuck's number one leading man, Tyrone Power, was non-musical. So Zanuck had to reach out to his former employer, Jack Warner, to borrow Dick Powell to play opposite Faye. Ironically Powell got the hit song out of this film with I've Got My Love To Keep Me Warm.   [ show more ]

Written on IMDB a long time ago.
 

Kalaman wrote on IMDB:

"On the Avenue" is a highly underrated gem from the 30s and one of Alice Faye's best musicals at Fox. It is less well-known than Faye's other Fox musicals such as "Alexander's Ragtime Band", "That Night in Rio" and "Hello, Frisco, Hello". But "On the Avenue" has a taste and class of its own, not to mention lots of great and rollicking tunes including the memorable "Slumming on Park Avenue", "He Ain't Got Rhythm", "I've Got My Love To Keep Me Warm", and "This Year's Kisses". Excellent stuff.

Written on IMDB a long time ago.
 

lugonian wrote on IMDB:

ON THE AVENUE (20th Century-Fox, 1937), directed by Roy Del Ruth, is a lively musical film capitalizing on the current trend of screwball comedies that never seems to go out of style: spoofing high society. For instance, art imitating life with a theatrical company poking fun of a rich family with a well-to-do family recognizing themselves as the subject matter, and taking action.

Gary Blake (Dick Powell), star of the latest musical show, "On the Avenue," has written a play about "The Richest Girl in Town," starring himself as the rich father with Mona Merrick (Alice Faye) in the title role. Mimi Carraway (Madeleine Carroll), the richest girl in town, along with her father, the Commodore (George Barbier), Aunt Fritz (Cora Witherspoon) and fiancĂ©, Frederick Sims (Alan Mowbray), an Arctic explorer, attend the opening and immediately recognize themselves as the topic of society fun. At the conclusion of the play, Mimi storms over to Blake's dressing room where she greets him with anger and a slap on the face. Because she refuses to listen to reason, Blake hasher forcibly ejected from the theater for not being a "good sport." Thinking back of what was said, Mimi agrees on becoming a "good sport" by inviting Gary for a night on of town, posing as Mr. and Mrs.Hossenpfeiffer, to discuss matters and have fun at the same time. Returning home at dawn, Gary and Mimi, who have fallen in love, come to a compromise. Mimi agrees to let Gary carry on with his show as written while Gary goes one step further by tastefully changing the material so it won't be offensive. Jealous over Gary's infatuation towards Mimi, Mona takes it upon herself on sketching the musical play to be even worse than before. Mimi and family attend to witness the shock of their lives with the play's revision. Believing Gary is at fault, Mimi gets even by buying the rights to the show and hiring patrons to walkout during Gary's performance and using the Ritz Brothers to make him look ridiculous for every newspaper critic in town to see. Once Gary discovers what Mimi has done, it becomes his turn to have the last laugh.   [ show more ]

Written on IMDB a long time ago.

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