Dimples | |
Director: | William A. Seiter |
Producer: | Nunnally Johnson Darryl F. Zanuck |
Starring: | Shirley Temple Frank Morgan Helen Westley |
Music: | Jimmy McHugh |
Cinematography: | Bert Glennon |
Distributor: | 20th Century-Fox |
Runtime: | 79 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Gross: | $1 million[1] |
Dimples is a 1936 American musical drama film directed by William A. Seiter. The screenplay was written by Nat Perrin and Arthur Sheekman. The film was panned by the critics. Videocassette and DVD versions of the film were available in 2009.
A young mid-nineteenth century street entertainer is separated from her pickpocket grandfather when given a home by a wealthy New York City widow.
This movie was originally to be titled The Bowery Princess but was changed as it was deemed too coarse for Temple's image.
There was a great deal of friction on the set of this movie as Morgan and Temple repeatedly tried to steal scenes from one another. Morgan would place his stovepipe hat on a table blocking Temple's face and forcing her to move her marks and out of the camera lights. He would also keep moving his hands near her eye level by tinkering with a handkerchief or placing on gloves. Temple for her part would either yawn or scratch her face. In the scene where Morgan's character gets ripped off by con men, Temple jiggled the fishing pole she was holding in the background in an attempt to draw attention away from Morgan. She also worked with Robinson to devise ways of creating rhythmic pauses and gestures in her dance movements to prevent scene stealing from Morgan. Producer Nunally Johnson, commenting on the scene stealing, remarked that "When this picture is over, either Shirley will have acquired a taste for Scotch whiskey or Frank will come out with curls."[2]
The film's songs – "Hey, What Did the Blue Jay Say", "He Was a Dandy", "Picture Me Without You", "Get On Board", "Dixie-anna", and "Wings of the Morning" – were written by Jimmy McHugh and lyricist Ted Koehler. The dances were choreographed by Bill Robinson who appeared with Temple in four films and partnered her for the famous staircase tap dance in The Little Colonel.
Sony Computer Entertainment later used the song Get On Board for a PlayStation 2 advertisement entitled "Mountain".
New York Times reviewer Frank Nugent considered Dimples a generic Shirley Temple production, with unsurprising plot elements, and was of the opinion that "'Dimples' is not the best Temple, nor the worst.'"[3]
Temple scholar Robert Windeler notes that Temple was upstaged for the first time in one of her pictures.
The film was released on DVD on March 12, 2002.[4] In 2009, a videocassette was available in the original black and white and in computer-colorized versions of the original. Some editions included theatrical trailers and other special features.