Ups and Downs (1937 film)

1937 American film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ups and Downs (1937) is a short film directed by Roy Mack and starring Broadway dancer Hal Le Roy. It was released by Warner Bros. as part of its Broadway Brevities series of two-reel musical shorts, released in 1937 and 1938.[1]

Directed byRoy Mack
Written byJack Henley
Cyrus Wood
Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...
Ups and Downs
Directed byRoy Mack
Written byJack Henley
Cyrus Wood
Produced byVitaphone Corporation
StarringHal Le Roy
June Allyson
CinematographyRay Foster
Edited byBert Frank
Music bySammy Cahn
Saul Chaplin
Cliff Hess
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
  • 1937 (1937)
Running time
21 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
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The film was made in New York City, and was Bronx native June Allyson's first film for a major studio.[2]

Synopsis

An elevator operator Harry Smith (Hal Le Roy), who works in a luxury hotel, courts the hotel president's daughter June Dailey (June Allyson). She is engaged to another, but when her fiancé leaves on a business trip, Harry asks her to join him for dinner.

During dinner, Harry is introduced to her father, who misinterprets Harry's remarks about elevators as being a tip to invest in the Upsadaisy Elevator Company. June's fiancé returns and breaks off the engagement, thinking that his prospective father-in-law has lost everything on a worthless stock. However, the investment turns out to be wildly profitable, Harry and June are engaged, and the film ends with them tap-dancing away in a production number dominated by a giant stock ticker machine.

Cast

  • Hal Le Roy as Harry Smith
  • June Allyson as June Daily
  • Phil Silvers as Charlie
  • Fred Hillebrand
  • Alexander Campbell
  • Reed Brown Jr.
  • Toni Lane as herself (singer)
  • The Deauville Boys as themselves (singers)

Home media

Ups and Downs appears as a special feature on the 2005 DVD of the film Stage Door.[3]

References

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