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My Blue Heaven (1950)

My Blue Heaven (1950)

GENRESDrama,Musical
LANGEnglish
ACTOR
Betty GrableDan DaileyDavid WayneJane Wyatt
DIRECTOR
Henry Koster

SYNOPSICS

My Blue Heaven (1950) is a English movie. Henry Koster has directed this movie. Betty Grable,Dan Dailey,David Wayne,Jane Wyatt are the starring of this movie. It was released in 1950. My Blue Heaven (1950) is considered one of the best Drama,Musical movie in India and around the world.

Radio star Kitty Moran, long married to partner Jack, finds she's pregnant, but miscarries. For a change, the couple turn their act into a series on early TV and try to adopt a baby, finally acquiring a girl in a somewhat back alley manner. Complications follow amid a series of musical numbers.

My Blue Heaven (1950) Reviews

  • Like The Song Says, "And Baby Makes Three"

    bkoganbing2009-07-08

    My Blue Heaven which starred Dan Dailey and Betty Grable are a happy show business couple who started in vaudeville and now are going into that happy new medium television. This was one of the first films that dealt with the phenomenon of television. As Dailey says during the course of the film, right now only Milton Berle and Howdy Doody are in it, the field is wide open. Dailey and Grable are a happy couple, but they'd even be happier with a child, in fact Betty loses a baby almost at the beginning of the film. Friends and sponsors, David Wayne and Jane Wyatt suggest adopting because three of their six are adopted. The rest of the film is a lighter treatment of the themes from A Penny Serenade. Things go a lot happier for Dailey and Grable than they did for Cary Grant and Irene Dunne. Because they are a musical performing couple Grable and Dailey get a whole lot of numbers and there's even a few tossed in for Mitzi Gaynor who was doing her second film. What a pity she came along as late as she did, she would have been a Grade A star in the Thirties. Gaynor plays an eager young understudy who'd just as soon Grable stay out on maternity leave. Other than the title song, there's nothing terribly memorable in the score that Harold Arlen and Ralph Blane wrote for My Blue Heaven. Of course very few songs are as memorable. Until Bing Crosby introduced White Christmas in Holiday Inn, My Blue Heaven was the largest selling song in history with Gene Austin's version topping the charts. My Blue Heaven is a pleasant enough diversion. Grable and Dailey work well as a team together, you'll enjoy them.

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  • My Blue Heaven- Almost A Penny Serenade Musical ****

    edwagreen2008-06-11

    Wonderful Bette Grable and Dan Dailey fanfare dealing with a musical couple's hard luck in having their own child. They are forced to resort to adoption when a traffic accident causes the loss of her unborn child. We then see unscrupulous adoption procedures and other mayhem preventing this couple from having a child of their own. The couple do a routine on television and Dailey along with Grable show they could still sing and dance at their best. In a brief role, Mitzi Gaynor, who would play Daley's daughter 4 years later in "There's No Business Like Showbusiness," turns up as a fellow dancer who is ready to flirt and take Daley away from Gable. The wonderful is ending but we expected that. In such film predicaments, they usually do just that.

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  • "My Blue Kitsch"

    ticketseller88952006-07-02

    This is not the typical "Betty Grable Extravaganza" that she may have starred in 10 years prior. Instead it is comedy/soap opera/musical chronicling Grable and Dailey's struggle to become parents. Grable has matured here and this film highlights a more confident Grable on all fronts. This might have been a great melodrama/musical. What actually wieghs down the proceedings are the musical numbers attached to their "televsion appearances". While these numbers are by and large terrific, the songs border on "poverty row" quality. Take a listen to "It's Deductible" and you'll see what I mean. Thankfully Grable and Dailey make the best of the songs given to them to sing and they make it all seem much more fabulous than it would have been in less capable hands. The constant melodrama of "couple loses baby, gets baby, loses baby" gets tiresome and the inherent sexism does not hold up well today (i.e. Grable's response to her husband's indiscretion with Mitzi Gaynor). Aside from these detractors, "My Blue Heaven" boasts a delightful supporting cast including Mitzi Gaynor, Jane Wyatt and the wonderful Una Merkel. These actors help buoy what could have easily been a sinking ship. This is not a superb vehicle by any means, but it does serve a great piece of kitsch presenting Post-war America and the burgeoning industry of television.

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  • and babies make 5(6 with Mitzi)

    weezeralfalfa2012-01-22

    One of 4 films Grable made with favorite male costar Dan Dailey. They made a perfect 'A' team with their vaudevillian broad entertainment talents. Her previous male costars, with matinée idol looks, could sometimes sing acceptably, do social dancing and a bit of comedy, but only Dailey could keep up with Betty in the dance routine department and match her comedic talents.This made less necessary the inclusion of supporting specialty dancers, such as the Nicholas Brothers, and multitalented supporting entertainers of either sex, such as Carmen Miranda, Charlotte Greenwood,Jack Oakie and Cesar Romero, which were standard in her films of the early '40s. Nonetheless, young newcomer Mitzi Gaynor is featured several times as a dancer-singer and girl on the make for the affections of Dan. She and Dan are featured in a sexy sophisticated dance routine while singing "Live Hard, Work Hard, Love Hard".Cleverly, Betty is watching this performance at home on her TV, and joins in, with the implication that this girl had better watch out if she makes a play for Dan(as she does). In this film, children, specifically infants, become the main focus of the melodramatic elements, rather than the on again, off again, romantic and professional relations of the stars, which was the usual source of melodrama in Betty's other musicals. As the commentary version of the 2006 DVD says, babies were an especially appropriate topic at this time, with the post-war baby boom. The periodic topic of children being an income tax deduction related to the increased income taxes following WWII.The unusual topics, especially for a musical of that period, of miscarriage and the trials of adopting a child, are featured in the melodrama. As was often the case for the romantic and professional ups and downs in previous Grable films, the ups and downs of acquiring a baby get overblown and a bit tedious.Throughout much of the film, Betty's desire to interact with an infant is frustrated by the hazard of stress-induced miscarriage, the excessive legal complications involved in adopting a child, and a very bossy nurse maid, who considers Betty too inexperienced to care properly for an infant.These problems are finally resolved in a madcap ending, thus justifying the title and theme song. As a counterweight to their frustrating experiences in trying to acquire a child of their own, they have a good time entertaining the kids of a friend with their Halloween skit. As in the later MGM musical "Always Fair Weather", the emerging competing medium of TV is incorporated into the story. Again, the often inane TV commercials are parodied, with Mitzi serving as the presenter. Anachronistically, TV pictures are presented as being in color, presumably to fit in with the rest of this color production. This was several years before the earliest color TY broadcasts, and at least a decade before color TVs were common. The "Friendly Islands" musical routine clearly is a take-off of the then smash Broadway hit "South Pacific", with Dailey parodying the operatic singing style of Ezio Pinza(duplicated by Rossano Brazzi in the later film version) and Betty sporting a wild bird-like outfit and brunette wig in the later portion, to accompany a wild dance, which Dailey joins. Reminded me more of an Aztec or African dance. Having previously played a caucasian who could dance the hula on a small South Seas island("Song of the Islands"), Betty's performance could also be interpreted as an extension of her performance in that film. In the last, long, musical number: "Don't Rock the Boat, Dear", Betty and Dan cavort on a ship in a rocky sea, symbolically reaffirming their devotion to each other. These two performances, along with the "Live Hard, Work Hard, Love Hard" number were the musical highlights for me.

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  • Betty grows up

    capricorn92006-08-05

    Saw this film numerous times on TV in various versions. What a delight to find it now on DVD with a good print and in glorious colour. This is the first time I noticed the search lights on the 20th logo were different colours!After a couple of flop films, the studio seemed to bring things up to the times with a plot that included television (not a popular idea in Hollywood around this time), miscarriages, adoption, possibly adultery plus few songs and dances. Betty's comic timing has never been better, especially in the scene where she catches her husband Dan and understudy Mitzi Gaynor together. This is a worthy addition to anyone's collection!

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