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Show Girl (1928 film)

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Show Girl
Directed byAlfred Santell
Screenplay byJames T. O'Donohue
George Marion (titles)
Produced byRichard A. Rowland
StarringAlice White
Donald Reed
Lee Moran
CinematographySol Polito
Edited byLeRoy Stone
Music byJoseph Meyer
Irving Caesar
Edward Grossman
Ted Ward
Production
company
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures
Release date
  • September 23, 1928 (1928-09-23)
Running time
61 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageSound (Synchronized) (English Intertitles)

Show Girl is a 1928 American synchronized sound comedy-drama film starring Alice White and Donald Reed. While the film has no audible dialog, it was released with a synchronized musical score with sound effects using the sound-on-disc Vitaphone process. The film was based on the first of J. P. McEvoy's two Dixie Dugan novels, as was the 1929 musical. It was followed by a sequel, Show Girl in Hollywood (1930).[1]

Plot

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Dixie Dugan, a Brooklyn cutie, goes to the offices of theatrical producers Eppus and Kibbitzer and exposes her perfections in a bathing suit. Eppus and Kibbitzer express interest in her future and arrange for her to work in a nightclub act with Álvarez Romano. One evening Dixie accompanies wealthy sugardaddy Jack Milton to his apartment, and Álvarez stalks in and wounds Milton with a knife. Jimmy Doyle, a cynical tabloid reporter in love with Dixie, gets the story for his newspaper's front page. Dixie is then kidnaped by Álvarez, but quickly manages to free herself. Jimmy persuades her to hide low as a publicity stunt and puts the "kidnaping" on page one. Dixie is found by Milton, who, by way of apology for ruining her stunt, finances her in a Broadway show written by Jimmy. The show is a success, and Jimmy and Dixie are married.

Cast

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Music

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The film featured a theme song which was entitled "She's One Sweet Show Girl" and was composed by Ted Ward and Edward Crossman. The song "Buy, Buy For Baby (Or Baby Will Bye Bye You)," which was composed by Joseph Meyer and Irving Caesar, was also featured on the soundtrack.

Preservation

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The film was considered a lost film, with only the Vitaphone soundtrack still in existence. However, a print was discovered in an Italian film archive, Cineteca Italiana, in 2015.[2] A restored version, with the original Vitaphone soundtrack synched to the print, was screened at New York's Film Forum on October 25, 2016, marking the first time the film was publicly exhibited in 88 years.[3] The screening was introduced by Vitaphone Project founder Ron Hutchinson. The film will be planned released by Warner Home Video.

See also

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References

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