The Rainbow Man | |
Director: | Fred C. Newmeyer |
Music: | Louis F. Gottschalk |
Cinematography: | Jack MacKenzie |
Editing: | J.R. Crone |
Distributor: | Sono Art-World Wide Pictures |
Runtime: | 96 minutes |
Language: | English |
Country: | United States |
The Rainbow Man (known as La valle delle rose in Italy) is a 1929 American pre-Code musical drama film. A copy of The Rainbow Man is preserved by the Library of Congress Packard Campus.[1]
According to film magazine, Rainbow Ryan, a minstrel performer, adopts Billy Ryan, the son of an acrobat friend who is killed while performing on stage. Playing in a small town, Rainbow falls in love with Mary Land, the daughter of a strict hotelkeeper who disapproves of all theatrical people. Rainbow moves on with the show, and Mary belatedly discovers that Billy is the child of her dead sister. Mary goes after Rainbow, and he sends Billy back home with her, renouncing his love for her for fear of going against her father's command that she has nothing to do with entertainers. The minstrel show is booked into a small town near Mary's, however, and Billy runs away to see Rainbow. Mary follows, and she and Rainbow are reunited.
Written by James F. Hanley and Andrew Sterling
Written by James F. Hanley and Eddie Dowling
Written by James F. Hanley and Eddie Dowling
The Rainbow Man was the film debut of George 'Gabby' Hayes (billed as "George Hayes").
A New York Times review stated that: "The Rainbow Man is an ingenuous stream of slow music and tears, with occasional interludes of more or less effective comedy. Those in the theatre laughed heartily at the fun, and for all one knows they may have shed tears over the distressing state of affairs that surround Rainbow Ryan (Mr. Dowling). Sometimes the incidents are reminiscent of ancient melodramas, for one perceives the most amazing coincidences throughout the picture."[2]