IMDb RATING
6.4/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Two young women find their friendship strained when one wins a role in a Broadway show, and the other's boyfriend begins to fall for her.Two young women find their friendship strained when one wins a role in a Broadway show, and the other's boyfriend begins to fall for her.Two young women find their friendship strained when one wins a role in a Broadway show, and the other's boyfriend begins to fall for her.
Oscar Apfel
- Doctor Attending Pa
- (uncredited)
Max Barwyn
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
George Bookasta
- Street Kid
- (uncredited)
George Cooper
- O'Brien - Stage Manager
- (uncredited)
John Davidson
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
Dorothy Dixon
- Acrobatic Dancer
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFinal film of Billie Dove. She retired after this film both to raise a family and in anger at the "behind-the-scenes" interference from William Randolph Hearst, Marion Davies' lover and the producer of the film. Dove appeared in a small part 30 years later in Diamond Head (1962), but her scene was eventually cut from the film before its release.
- GoofsAfter Larry and Blondie talk about dogs in China, she runs out and the scene changes to the apartment's patio. There, the shadow of the boom microphone moves onto and off the curtains above the dog in the chair to the left, twice.
- SoundtracksGood Night My Love
(1932) (uncredited)
Written by Harry Tobias, Gus Arnheim and Neil Moret (as Jules Lemare)
Featured review
The hardscrabble tenement streets shriek of Warner Brothers (though the movie moves from them soon enough), and the slanginess and very pre-Code suggestiveness of pretty young things kept in lavish Deco apartments is rather hard-boiled for the Ars Gratia Artis studio, too. And it's a strange brew, halfway between enjoyable, rude comedy and sentimental soap opera, with the likable Davies and the hard-staring Dove slugging it out for the affections of Robert Montgomery in his leading-man-opposite-MGM-leading-lady days. He's a drunk and a playboy, but also, we are led to believe, a decent and sacrificing guy. The friendship between Davies and Dove is convincing and touching (though it takes some unconvincingly abrupt turns), and Anita Loos could write girl-talk dialog with the best of them. There are also a couple of father-daughter scenes between Davies and the always wonderful James Gleason that will just break your heart. But the movie does keep skirting credibility (could the exquisite Davies and Zasu Pitts really spring from the same gene pool?), and Davies' Act Three laugh-clown-laugh, smile-through-tears demeanor is close to self-parody. Most jarring of all is dragging in Jimmy Durante for five minutes of hideously unfunny special material, including a strained sendup of "Grand Hotel" (also directed by Edmund Goulding) that serves mainly to remind one of Davies' limitations. A fun flick all in all, but when it came to hard-boiled dames and backstage melo, MGM wasn't really at the forefront.
- How long is Blondie of the Follies?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Good Time Girl
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $602,620 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 31 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was Blondie of the Follies (1932) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer