Dames (1934) - (Movie Clip) Feed Him To The Lions!
Moralist Hemingway (Guy Kibbee) has been blackmailed into backing the show nephew Jimmy (Dick Powell) and Mabel (Joan Blondell) are putting on, unaware that his daughter (Ruby Keeler) is trying out under an assumed name, having no luck trying to back out, in Warner Bros. Dames, 1934.
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A reformer's daughter wins the lead in a scandalous Broadway show in Busby Berkeley's musical Dames (1934).
Dames (1934) -- (Movie Clip) I Only Have Eyes For You
A portion of the sizable Busby Berkeley number introducing the Harry Warren and Al Dubin standard written for the film, Dick Powell and Ruby Keeler the enraptured couple, worth noting this is all supposed to be happening on a musical theater stage, in Warner Bros. Dames, 1934.
Smart Money (1931) -- (Movie Clip) Saint Nick For Dames
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Gold Diggers Of 1933 (1933) -- (Movie Clip) I Hate Starving In Bed
Broadway in a slump and the girls suffering, Carol (Joan Blondell), Trixie (Aline MacMahon) and Polly (Ruby Keeler) improvising when Fay (Ginger Rogers ) shows up with a glimmer of good news, wisecracking in Warner Bros. style, in the first in the series, Gold Diggers Of 1933, 1933.
Angel Face (1953) -- (Movie Clip) I've Been Slapped By Dames Before
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Dames (1934) -- (Movie Clip) We're Thirteenth Cousins
Kooky moral-crusader zillionaire Ounce (Hugh Herbert) and aide (Johnny Arthur) advise cousin Hemingway (Guy Kibbee) that his daughter (Ruby Keeler) must avoid cousin Jimmy (Dick Powell) if they want that inheritance, which she isnt, song by Sammy Fain and Irving Kahal, early in Dames, 1934.
Dames (1934) -- (Movie Clip) The Girl At The Ironing Board
Part of the Broadway show imagined in the narrative, the first segment of a modest Busby Berkeley number, song by Harry Warren and Al Dubin, and arguably one of the few solo pieces ever to take full advantage of Joan Blondell (as Mabel) in a Warner Bros. musical, from Dames, 1934.
Dames (1934) -- (Movie Clip) I Was With The Jolly Widows
Filthy rich morality nut Ounce (Hugh Herbert) on the train from Buffalo with cousin Horace (Guy Kibbee), who is giddy about the inheritance hes getting, contingent on good behavior, thus panicked by the fleshy appearance of Joan Blondell as showgirl Mabel, in Warner Bros. Dames, 1934.