The A-B-C's of Love
Brief Synopsis
Film Details
Technical Specs

Synopsis
As Roberta Tremain sings "The A-B-C's of Love," the six dancers are introduced. Thereafter, the dancers' routines are interspersed with comedy sketches. Jill Adams and Helen Lewis do not strip, but perform a tap-dance and a Can-can respectively. Wilma Wescott delivers a comedy song, "If I Had Me Life to Live Over" and Debbie Ates does an impression of a 1920s dance hall girl looking for a partner for a Charleston contest. Of the male comedians, Leon De Voe functions as the straight man.

Director
Lillian Hunt
Cast
Gilda
May Blondell
Helen Lewis
Jill Adams
Bebe Hughes
Blaza Glory
Leon De Voe
Eddie Ware
Beetlepuss Lewis
Charlie Crafts
Wilma Wescott
Dorothy Ates
Gloria Pall
Crew

Film Details
Technical Specs

Quotes
Trivia
Notes
The print viewed bore a copyright statement, but the film was not registered. The film was reviewed in The Exhibitor and submitted to the New York Censor Board under the title Uncover Girls. Gilda's name was listed twice in the opening credits, first as "The Golden Girl of Burlesque," and a second time as the last of the list of "Dancers." Gilda was a former child actress named Shirley Jean Rickert, who made several "Our Gang" shorts and other films in the early 1930s.
