Chasing Rainbows (1930 film) explained

Chasing Rainbows
Director:Charles Reisner
Starring:Bessie Love
Charles King
Music:Milton Ager
Jack Yellen
Cinematography:Ira H. Morgan
Editing:George Hively
Distributor:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Runtime:106 minutes (complete but lost)
90 minutes (extant)
85 minutes (TCM print)
Country:United States
Language:English
Gross:$700,000

Chasing Rainbows (also known as The Road Show)[1] is a 1930 American Pre-Code romantic musical film directed by Charles Reisner, and released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

The film reunites The Broadway Melody stars Bessie Love and Charles King, with a supporting cast of Jack Benny, Marie Dressler, and Polly Moran.[2] This was Jack Benny's first dramatic role in a motion picture.

Filmed in July and August 1929, it was not released for months later, missing an opportunity to capitalize on the success of its song "Happy Days Are Here Again", which by then had already been a major hit.[3]

Plot

Carlie (Love) and Terry (King) are in a traveling vaudeville troupe with Eddie (Benny), the stage manager; Bonnie (Dressler), a comedian; and Polly (Moran), the wardrobe mistress. Terry constantly falls in love with his leading ladies, and marries Daphne (Martan), a two-timing songstress. When he finds her with another man, Terry threatens to kill himself, but Carlie reassures him that "Happy Days Are Here Again," and the show goes on.[4] [5]

Reception

The film was commercially successful, but not as much as expected.[6]

Love, Dressler, and Benny all received positive reviews for their performances.

Preservation status

Chasing Rainbows was mostly filmed in black and white, but had two sequences shot in Technicolor. The film survives, but the color scenes are lost, having been removed for a re-release in 1931 and were destroyed in the 1965 MGM vault fire. The audio from the missing technicolor scenes still exists on Vitaphone disks, including "Happy Days Are Here Again".[7]

The film has been issued on DVD in the Warner Archive Collection.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. New M-G-M Release Schedule. 23. Hollywood Filmograph. June 22, 1929.
  2. News: Movie Review: Chasing Rainbows (1929). The New York Times. Hall. Mordaunt. February 22, 1930. September 11, 2014.
  3. Book: Bradley, Edwin M.. There's a Tear for Every Smile in Hollywood. https://books.google.com/books?id=Rg-UBJaPD-sC&pg=PA213. 213. The First Hollywood Musicals: A Critical Filmography of 171 Features, 1927 through 1932. McFarland. August 11, 2004. 978-0-7864-2029-2.
  4. Chasing Rainbows. 9. The Film Daily. 1930.
  5. The Screen in Review. 64–5. Norbert. Lusk. Picture Play. June 1930.
  6. W.B. Hollywood Does Top Figure for Current Year. Inside Facts of Stage and Screen. April 5, 1930. 3.
  7. Web site: Chasing Rainbows (1930). Turner Classic Movies. September 14, 2014.