Kelly the Second


1h 25m 1936
Kelly the Second

Brief Synopsis

A feisty Irish woman turns a truck driver into a championship boxer.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Release Date
Aug 21, 1936
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corp.
Distribution Company
Loew's Inc.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 25m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
7 reels

Synopsis

Mollie Patricia Kelly is rushing to her job as the lunch counter manager at Dr. J. Willoughby Klum's drugstore when her car accidentally latches onto a passing truck that drags her through half of New York. When the truck finally stops, she starts yelling at its driver, Cecil Callahan, and their arguing results in a free-for-all fight among bystanders. The police are used to Cecil's fighting and alert the station house, which dispatches a paddy wagon. When Mollie accidentally hits a radio, causing it to play "The Irish Washerwoman," however, Cecil quickly bests his opponents and the two flee. After driving Mollie to work, Cecil finally has to face the police, who spot his truck outside. Because Mollie and Dr. Klum try to hide Cecil, they are also brought into court, but are set free. Feeling sorry for Cecil, Dr. Klum offers to help and inadvertently winds up posting his store as a bond to ensure that the pugnacious Cecil will never fight again. Realizing that Cecil can't live without fighting, Mollie decides to turn him into a boxer, with Klum as manager and herself as trainer. On the night of his first fight, Cecil is a few pounds underweight, so Mollie stuffs him with bananas just before the match. Meanwhile, Klum is seated next to gangster Ike Arnold and unwittingly gets Arnold to bet $1,000 on Cecil when the two men find they have a common interest in astrology. When Cecil is quickly knocked out because of his upset stomach, Arnold thinks he has been duped and the frightened Klum rushes back to the drug store, closely followed by Arnold and his gang. Because he saw Cecil slug his opponent for real in the dressing rooms, Arnold knows that he can fight and proposes a partnership with Klum. Soon Mollie and Cecil go to train in the country and Cecil begins to win. Within a few months, he has won nineteen fights and is scheduled to oppose the heavyweight champion, Butch Flynn. At a party, Mollie becomes jealous of Gloria, Arnold's girl friend, when she thinks that Cecil prefers her. That same night, Gloria becomes angry at Arnold because he tries to palm a rabbit coat off as ermine, so she decides to make a play for Cecil. Cecil and Mollie argue, and when Gloria invites him to her apartment, he goes. On the night of the fight, neither Mollie nor Klum can find Cecil until their assistant Dan tells Mollie that he is in a nightclub with Gloria. Mollie goes to get him, but when he drunkenly says he is going to marry Gloria, she leaves. When Cecil finally comes back, Klum tries to sober him up, but Arnold sees him and secretly decides to bet on Flynn. When the fight starts, Cecil tries to win, but can't, because he misses Mollie. She, meanwhile, has disguised herself in a long beard and glasses and is watching the fight from the audience. When she hears Gloria tell Arnold that she wasn't fooling around with Cecil, and all he talked about was Mollie, Mollie rushes to the ring and encourages him to win. She uses a hatpin to stick him when he falls down, but when even this doesn't help, she asks Klum to play "The Irish Washerwoman" on a hurdy gurdy. Cecil then jumps into action until a nervous Arnold has the hurdy gurdy smashed. Now desperate, Mollie rushes into the audience, and after asking for Irishmen, gets them to sing the song. Soon the entire audience joins in and Cecil bests his opponent. Finally free from worries, Klum says that Cecil and Mollie can now get married, and after a few verbal punches, they agree.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Release Date
Aug 21, 1936
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corp.
Distribution Company
Loew's Inc.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 25m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
7 reels

Articles

Kelly the Second


In Kelly the Second (1936), comedienne Patsy Kelly plays a drugstore lunch-counter manager who winds up turning an out-of-control truck driver (Guinn Williams) into a boxer by becoming his trainer -- with Kelly's boss (Charley Chase) serving as manager. And that's just the beginning of a 70-minute piece of Hal Roach-produced silliness.

This was Kelly's first starring feature for Roach after having famously co-starred with Thelma Todd in 21 comedic short subjects. Kelly had replaced Todd's original partner in those shorts, Zasu Pitts, when Pitts left the Roach studios in 1933. When Todd died in 1935 under mysterious circumstances, Kelly made a few more shorts and a feature with other co-stars before being given her own leading role in Kelly the Second.

42-year-old German-born director Gus Meins already had well over 100 films to his credit by the time of Kelly the Second; most of them were short subjects including many "Our Gang" titles. He would direct sixteen more films before committing suicide in 1940.

1940 also saw the death (by heart attack) of Charley Chase, who co-stars here but had earlier been one of the great silent comedy stars. Soon after Kelly the Second, Chase was dismissed by Roach and migrated to Columbia Pictures, where he directed and starred in several more comedy shorts before his death.

Producer: Hal Roach (uncredited)
Director: Gus Meins
Screenplay: Jeff Moffitt, William Terhune; Tom Bell, Arthur V. Jones (dialogue); Jack Jevne, Gordon Douglas (adaptation)
Cinematography: Art Lloyd
Music: Leroy Shield (uncredited)
Film Editing: Jack Ogilvie
Cast: Patsy Kelly (Molly Patricia Kelly), Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams (Cecil Joseph Callahan), Charley Chase (Dr. J. Willoughby Klum), Pert Kelton (Gloria), Edward Brophy (Ike Arnold), Harold Huber (Spike), Maxie Rosenbloom (Butch Flynn), DeWitt C. Jennings (Judge), Syd Saylor (Dan).
BW-71m.

by Jeremy Arnold
Kelly The Second

Kelly the Second

In Kelly the Second (1936), comedienne Patsy Kelly plays a drugstore lunch-counter manager who winds up turning an out-of-control truck driver (Guinn Williams) into a boxer by becoming his trainer -- with Kelly's boss (Charley Chase) serving as manager. And that's just the beginning of a 70-minute piece of Hal Roach-produced silliness. This was Kelly's first starring feature for Roach after having famously co-starred with Thelma Todd in 21 comedic short subjects. Kelly had replaced Todd's original partner in those shorts, Zasu Pitts, when Pitts left the Roach studios in 1933. When Todd died in 1935 under mysterious circumstances, Kelly made a few more shorts and a feature with other co-stars before being given her own leading role in Kelly the Second. 42-year-old German-born director Gus Meins already had well over 100 films to his credit by the time of Kelly the Second; most of them were short subjects including many "Our Gang" titles. He would direct sixteen more films before committing suicide in 1940. 1940 also saw the death (by heart attack) of Charley Chase, who co-stars here but had earlier been one of the great silent comedy stars. Soon after Kelly the Second, Chase was dismissed by Roach and migrated to Columbia Pictures, where he directed and starred in several more comedy shorts before his death. Producer: Hal Roach (uncredited) Director: Gus Meins Screenplay: Jeff Moffitt, William Terhune; Tom Bell, Arthur V. Jones (dialogue); Jack Jevne, Gordon Douglas (adaptation) Cinematography: Art Lloyd Music: Leroy Shield (uncredited) Film Editing: Jack Ogilvie Cast: Patsy Kelly (Molly Patricia Kelly), Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams (Cecil Joseph Callahan), Charley Chase (Dr. J. Willoughby Klum), Pert Kelton (Gloria), Edward Brophy (Ike Arnold), Harold Huber (Spike), Maxie Rosenbloom (Butch Flynn), DeWitt C. Jennings (Judge), Syd Saylor (Dan). BW-71m. by Jeremy Arnold

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Notes

Preview running times for the film were 82 and 85 minutes. The Variety review noted that the film was trimmed "about fifteen minutes" from its original release. It has not been determined if it was released in some places at the preview length. According to Motion Picture Studio Insider, Paul Gustine was in the cast, but his participation in the released film has not been confirmed. According to reviews, this was Patsy Kelly's first starrring role in a feature after starring in many short films.