Zis Boom Bah (1941)
4/10
Grace Hayes Sets Her Son And Daughter-In-Law Straight
7 March 2019
Grace Hayes is giving up performing. She and protege Mary Healy will hunt new talent, maybe produce.... but first she needs to see her son (played by real-life son Peter Lind Hayes). He thinks she's dead like her father, and his grandfather, president of a small college, has had the raising of him. When she discovers how snobbish and profligate he is, she decides to stick around and reform everyone. Of course that means all the young people will put on a show.

The show within the show is a pretty good one, with some nice tunes -- even Huntz Hall sings, and sings well! -- good tap and chorus line dancing and some nice trumpet playing. If this movie were a revue, it would be a good, if not outstanding musical. It is not, however, a revue, but a book musical, and the story idea is fine, the acting is good, the comedy is a bit corny but well performed. However, either the writers that producer Sam Katzman didn't bother to polish the script so that it made much sense, or editor Robert Golden didn't know how to cut a movie. Maybe both. His credits as an editor are utterly undistinguished, except for one picture: NIGHT OF THE HUNTER. Well, maybe Charles Laughton did the actual editing on that one and Golden just handling the physical side of the job.

Despite the poor result, it must have been a happy set. Miss Healy would marry Mr. Hayes and they would live and perform together until his death.
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