Duck Soup (Leo McCarey, 1933).

#ryland grace#phm#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers


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Duck Soup (Leo McCarey, 1933).
SLYTHERIN: "Gentlemen, Chicolini here may talk like an idiot, and look like an idiot. But don't let that fool you. He really is an idiot." âBert Kalmar + Harry Ruby (Rufus T. Firefly: Duck Soup)
#MyTransfer #GrouchoMarx #HarryRuby #1951song #ClassicComedy
There were dozens of songs written about "Mothers" lamented Groucho Marx; but apart from "Pop! Goes the Weasel", nothing for dear old Dad. So Groucho's dear friend composer Harry Ruby ("Three Little Words"), wrote this song & Groucho performed it for years afterwards. It is sincere, & hysterical...
Animal Crackers premiered in Chicago, IL on 20 August 1930.
Based on the 1928 musical of the same name (written by George S. Kaufman and Morrie Ryskind, with songs by Bert Kalmar and Harry Ruby), with most of the cast appearing in the film version. It was the last stage production for the Marx Brothers, as they turned their attention to movies.
Animal Crackers was the 4th most popular film of 1930 in the US. It was not shown on television until 1979.
Now thatâs showbizÂ
âOh! The Last Rose of Summerâ (was the sweetest Rose of all) As introduced by Eddie Cantor in âThe Ziegfeld Follies of 1919âłÂ
Artwork: Albert Wilfred Barbelle
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MY-1TXYZdI4
âHorse Feathersâ (1932)  an appreciation post (02 of 03) Frame grabs from Groucho's "Dance of the Deans". I love this sequence. In the "boom" time of the 1920's going to College became a realization for thousands who may not of otherwise gone a generation earlier. By the time of the great depression however, that dream seemed rife for lampooning. The beardie-weirdie professors in their mortarboard cap & gowns make it seem like a cartoon college. (This scene is so surreal & seems almost like a 1930sâ Peter Arno cartoon from the New Yorker that has "come-to-life!) Beyond that; the number seems to have spiritual overtones & Groucho saving the college from financial ruin seems to be welcomed in manner that would suggest the "second coming"! This âHallelujah chorusâ number (âI Always Get My Manâ) was written by Bert Kalmar & Harry Ruby who also wrote Grouchoâs âHooray! For Captain Spauldingâ in âAnimal Crackersâ.
https://youtu.be/swruQD1JiOQ