Pick a Star

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Pick a Star
Pick A Star poster.jpg
Film poster
Directed byEdward Sedgwick
Written byRichard Flournoy
Arthur V. Jones
Thomas J. Dugan
Produced byHal Roach
StarringRosina Lawrence
Patsy Kelly
Jack Haley
Mischa Auer
Lyda Roberti
CinematographyNorbert Brodine
Art Lloyd
Music byMarvin Hatley
Production
company
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • May 21, 1937 (1937-05-21)
Running time
76 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Pick a Star is a 1937 American musical comedy film starring Rosina Lawrence, Jack Haley, Patsy Kelly and Mischa Auer, directed by Edward Sedgwick, produced by Hal Roach and released through Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and filmed by Norbert Brodine. A reworking of Buster Keaton's first talkie, Free and Easy, the film is mostly remembered today for two short scenes featuring Laurel and Hardy.

The film was reissued as Movie Struck by Astor Pictures in 1954.

Lobby card for the film

Plot

Cecelia (Rosina Lawrence) enters a talent show in Waterloo, Kansas with the promise that the winner will be given a part in a movie. Lawrence wins but never receives her prize because the organizer (Russell Hicks) has run off with the cash.

The emcee, Joe Jenkins (Jack Haley), feels partly responsible for her disappointment and promises Lawrence that he will go to Hollywood to launch her career as a movie star. He sells his garage and moves to Hollywood, but is only able to find a job bussing tables at a local nightclub. He writes to Lawrence, however, that he has become a successful entertainer.

Lawrence has in the meantime crossed paths with Latin lover movie idol Rinaldo Lopez (Mischa Auer), who arrives in Waterloo when his plane makes an emergency landing there. Two of the other passengers give their plane tickets to Lawrence and her sister Nellie (Patsy Kelly), who then accompany Auer to Hollywood.

When she surprises Haley by showing up at the nightclub where he works Haley pretends that he is part of the floor show rather than just a busboy. Lawrence sees through the ruse and leaves with Auer. Haley follows Lawrence as she leaves, and is hit by a studio mogul Mr. Klawheimer (Charles Halton), who gives Haley a job as a studio driver in order to avoid a lawsuit.

Meanwhile Auer takes the girls to the studio to watch musical star Dagmar (Lyda Roberti) shoot an elaborate scene modeled after the extravagant numbers shot by Busby Berkeley. Kelly wanders onto the set where Laurel and Hardy are filming a scene in a Mexican barroom, directed by (James Finlayson). After watching them film a brawl, she asks the team whether they're afraid of hurting themselves. Hardy explains that the bottles they hit each other with are lightweight phonies and offer their heads in demonstration. Kelly grabs an actual liquor bottle by mistake and knocks the team out cold.

While Kelly is distracted Auer invites Lawrence to his apartment. They are driven there by Haley, who sees what Auer has in mind, and drives back to the studio to get Kelly after dropping Lawrence and Auer off. While Haley and Kelly return, Lawrence is crying, prompting Kelly to knock Auer out cold. Haley stays to revive Auer when Lawrence and Kelly leave, and Auer promises that he will try to get Lawrence a job in the movies.

Later Laurel and Hardy engage in a musical competition involving a trumpet and a tiny harmonica. When Hardy accidentally swallows the harmonica Laurel shows how to continue to play it by pressing the right spots on Hardy's belly.

Roberti storms off the set in a fit of pique. A fed-up studio shoehorns Lawrence in her place and she makes good after Haley helps her overcome her stage fright during her screen test.

Cast[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Casts of Current Pictures". Picture Play. Street & Smith Publications, Inc. XLVI (6): 60. August 1937. Retrieved 16 January 2016.

External links