Gerry O. wrote:After reading that, I'm impressed by Dennis' show-business "savvy" and his very intelligent observations.
Gerry O. wrote: He was obviously in tune with what worked, what didn't work and why.
The tenor is presently working in "Thie Girl Next Door" and will play a whimsical ax murderer in his next film.
LLeff wrote:The tenor is presently working in "Thie Girl Next Door" and will play a whimsical ax murderer in his next film.
Dennis Day as Hannibal Lecter...
shimp scrampi wrote:The tenor is presently working in "Thie Girl Next Door" and will play a whimsical ax murderer in his next film.
Holy cow, did this raise anyone else's eyebrows? I am assuming this movie was never made, but it sounds like one I would like to see. I am picturing Dennis in the Jack Nicholson role in THE SHINING.
Such an obscure '50s Fox musical that I'd never even heard of it (and I know my '50s musicals), and made very late in the cycle of modest entertainments starring the likes of Dan Dailey and June Haver, this one has a few aces up its sleeve. There's a surprising amount of sung exposition at the beginning, under the credits, and later on some very brief singing sequences in the middle of dialogue -- it's as if even standard Fox musicals wanted to be more like their Rodgers and Hammerstein cousins on Broadway. It shows how pervasive the whole musical-comedy mode was back then. Later there are a couple of animated sequences that delve psychologically into the characters' motivations, and of course a dream ballet, and an amusingly overblown production number with Haver, "Nowhere Guy." The story's no great shakes, the songs run from OK to pretty good, and Haver proves again that proficiency at singing and dancing is less vital than personality, which she lacks. Dailey is a likable romantic counterpart, and Cara Williams is an invaluable best-friend-making-tart-comments -- though it's hard to accept that she'd fall for the rabbity face and syrupy tenor of Dennis Day. The utterly '50s production design is fun, and the more thorough musicalizing than usual gives this otherwise standard effort a couple of bonus points. All in all, it's very watchable.
Guess What? The movie WAS made, and apparently someone out there has seen it recently:
Dennis Day as an ax murderer......What's next, Kenny Baker wearing a hockey mask and running around with a chain saw? Shocked
Return to Jack Benny's associates
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests