Review of Sunny

Sunny (1930)
9/10
Could Marilyn Look Anymore Beautiful!!
1 September 2012
Warning: Spoilers
After scoring a hit in First National's top grosser for 1930 - "Sally", there was no question that charismatic Marilyn Miller would be asked to star in her other huge Broadway success of the 1920s, "Sunny". On the stage it opened spectacularly with a magnificent circus, Miller making her entrance in a tutu of gossamer and spangles and riding bareback on a magnificent white horse. After that it was one standing ovation after another and a lot of critics found it superior in every way to "Sally".

But something happened to the movie. The bubble had burst since "Sally" had been released and people had cooled towards the musical. Gone was the showy color in which "Sally" had dazzled audiences - it was four times as expensive as black and white to film and it also generated a torrid heat caused by the extra lights so Miller was not at all unhappy to be working in black and white. Another thing, Jack Warner felt the public were sick of long production numbers that slowed the story down and when players broke into song at inappropriate moments so comedy was given more prominence.

Sunny (Miller) billed as the greatest bare back rider in Britain is loved by Wendell-Wendell, a typical fuddy duddy Englishman, but she has never forgotten Tom (Lawrence Gray), a boy she knew long ago and with whom she has just become reacquainted through the lilting duet "Who". Knowing that he is sailing that afternoon, Sunny disguises herself as a boy and decides to stowaway. It is clear that there is a heavier influence on comedy here, much more than in "Sally", with gangling Joe Donahue, dithering O.P. Heggie and whiney Inez Courtney.

Tom is engaged to snooty Miss Manners (Barbara Bedford) and Sunny, who is in hiding in Jim's (Donahue) cabin makes her feelings known in the plaintive song "I Was Alone" - then with the throwaway line "let's have some fun" launches into a terrific dance of all the different styles of tap she made famous. She is wonderful and adorable and it is easy to see why she had Broadway audiences eating out of the palm of her hand. To help Sunny land in the States without a passport they arrange for her to marry Jim (in a magnificent ship board wedding)- in name only - even though he has left his girl, Weenie (Courtney) back in England.

Back in America, Jim gets the gym he has always wanted, Sunny is hopeful of eventually marrying her Tom and together she and Jim do an eccentric dance to "When We Get Our Divorce". Of course things get even more muddled before they are smoothed out and Miller performs the balletic "The Hunt Dance" before Tom comes to his senses and they embrace on the gravel drive.

First National spent a lot of money on the sets - the shipboard wedding, the gymnasium and an ornate ballroom for the climatic dance. Marilyn had thought Jack Donahue, who had starred with her on the stage, would repeat his role in the movie version but he was close to death as a result of alcoholism and so his younger brother, Joe, took his place.
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