Forty Little Mothers (1940) Poster

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7/10
it really tugs at your heart
kidboots14 October 2007
Warning: Spoilers
This film is so beautifully heartwarming - I can't imagine anyone not liking it. The baby (played by the intriugingly named Baby Quintanilla) is just adorable and so photogenic.

Eddie Cantor plays Gil Thompson a college professor fallen on hard times. He meets a young deserted mother (the under- rated Rita Johnson). After helping her find a job - he then finds her baby that she had left in a railway waiting room while she contemplated suicide.

Through an old school friend Eddie gets a job at an all girls school and the film brightens up then. Of course Eddie has to take the baby, he names Chum - even though, of course there is a no babies allowed rule.

Dame Judith Anderson really lets go for this role. It is hard to believe that this was her next film after "Rebecca"!!! She plays the head mistress, who has just dismissed the only male professor for being too good looking. She is so funny,(who would have thought) as is Nydia Westman as her dizzy vice principal. Whenever I see it I cry my eyes out at the part where Eddie lectures the girls for making fun of Baby Chum. He seems to have a real rapport with the baby .

Bonita Granville (her intenseness of "These Three" long gone) is the head girl and Veronica Lake can be glimpsed (just) as one of the girls.
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6/10
Eddie Gets A Baby
bkoganbing23 May 2006
Forty Little Mothers Has Eddie Cantor first saving Rita Johnson from committing suicide and then taking her baby when he mistakenly thinks someone abandoned it. It was a boy baby and that was a new experience for the man who founded Girls Town, USA.

This is a more dramatic Eddie than was previously seen on screen. He's a meek and gentle history professor, not the schnook he was normally cast as. He's replaced a heartthrob history professor at the college which insists on its faculty boarding at the school and they don't allow kids there. So says President Judith Anderson.

Cantor was cast with a whole bunch of young MGM starlets as the students and was reunited with Busby Berkeley who directs this film. He had done the musical numbers on several Cantor films for Sam Goldwyn earlier in the decade. Cantor only sings one song in the film, Little Curly Hair in a High Chair which had good success.

The woman have some Berkeley like moments serving as the baby's forty little mothers once the ice is broken with Cantor. But no real dance numbers as Berkeley was so well known for.

Look for Nydia Westman who plays Judith Anderson's assistant. She's quite funny, maybe the best thing in this film.

The story is nice though it does get a bit maudlin at times. Probably Eddie Cantor had he gotten something like Ed Wynn got later on in The Great Man or The Diary of Anne Frank, Cantor might have made his bones as a dramatic actor.
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7/10
"My Baby and Me"
lugonian26 March 2016
FORTY LITTLE MOTHERS (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1940), directed by Busby Berkeley, stars comedian Eddie Cantor in a delightful change of pace from anything he's ever done before. Known virtually for his excitable and nervous "Eddie" character with those "Banjo Eyes" who bursts into song, sometimes in black-face, a trademark best known during his peak years for Samuel Goldwyn (1930-1936), for his sole venture at MGM, Cantor not only abandons much of these traits, but gives a serious, well-intentioned performance on his part. FORTY LITTLE MOTHERS also reunites Cantor with choreographer, Busby Berkeley, from his Goldwyn days, with Berkeley now taking control from the director's chair. Unlike those early Cantor musicals, there's no promise of any lavish-scale musical numbers, yet it does provide some Berkeley trademarks in the narrative quite recognizable for anyone familiar with his creative visual style.

The story opens at a college reunion where the class of 1916 from Canford University, headed by Joseph M. Williams (Ralph Morgan), are gathered together at a reception rally. Everyone but Gilbert J. Thompson, a graduate with the highest academic honors whom Williams remembers as being the most likely to succeed. Williams wonders whatever became of him? Next scene reveals Gilbert J. Thompson (Eddie Cantor), a former college professor down on his luck, awaiting for a job opening as a deck hand during the late night hours. He soon loses his job opportunity when saving the life of a troubled girl named Marian Edwards (Rita Johnson) from jumping off a pier. He changes her luck by finding her a job as a waitress after buying her a cup of coffee. What Gilbert doesn't know is that Marian had earlier abandoned her eight-month old baby in the waiting room of a nearby depot. Gilbert soon finds the infant (Baby Quintanilla) in a basket with a note attachment reading "Please give my baby boy a good home." Flat broke and about to be evicted from his boardinghouse apartment, Gilbert takes in the baby, naming him "Chum." Finding Chum to be hungry, Gilbert leaves the infant in the care of his landlady, Mrs. Mason (Esther Dale), to get some food. Gilbert is arrested and taken to district police court on charges for stealing a bottle of milk. As luck would have it, the judge in this case turns out to be his former college classmate, Joseph Williams. Seeing his old friend down on his luck, the judge arranges Gilbert a position of college professor in an exclusive Madame Granville School for Girls. Due to Madeleine Granville's (Judith Anderson) strict rule for not having babies, especially males, allowed on campus, Gilbert arranges for Mama Lampini (Eve Puig), an Italian mother with children of her own, to look after Chum for the time being. All goes well until one of Mrs. Lampini's children comes down with the mumps, thus, forcing Gilbert to take in Chum and keeping him secretly in his room. Because the forty students, especially Doris (Bonita Granville), refuse to accept Gilbert as their new professor, they do whatever possible to get him to leave, but once Chum is discovered, Gilbert gains the girls' respect and confidence from, hence the title, his "forty little mothers." While trying to keep Madame Granville and her assistant, Cynthia Cliché (Nydia Westman) from learning the truth about Gilbert, the baby's mother resumes her frantic search for her baby with the help from detectives working for the bureau of missing persons.

New tunes by Harry Tobias and Nat Simon include: "The Canford School Song," "Old Acquaintance" (by Robert Burns); "Little Curly Hair in a High Chair," "Little Curly Hair in a High Chair" (reprise/both sung by Eddie Cantor); "You Were Meant For Me" (by Nacio Herb Brown and Alfred Freed, sung by co-eds); and "Little Curly Hair in a High Chair" (reprise).

Although "Little Curly Hair in a High Chair" did not do for Eddie Cantor as "Sonny Boy" did for Al Jolson, it's a cute song that goes underscored through much of its sentimental moments. Others in the supporting cast include Diana Lewis (Marcia); Margaret Early (Eleanor); Martha O'Driscoll (Janette); and Louise Seidel (Betty). Judith Anderson is ideally cast as the serious-minded faculty head while Rita Johnson as the mother is believable in her small but key role. Film buffs will try to spot future film star, Veronica Lake, as one of the unbilled extra students.

While a welcome change of pace for Eddie Cantor, the subject matter of a single man suddenly becoming an adoptive father is far from original. Perfect examples of this include Charlie Chaplin with Jackie Coogan in the great silent comedy-drama, THE KID (First National, 1921), and A BEDTIME STORY (Paramount, 1933) casting French entertainer Maurice Chevalier with "M'sieur Baby" LeRoy. Yet, FORTY LITTLE MOTHERS, like A BEDTIME STORY, is a forgotten gem of bachelor and baby story, never distributed to home video or DVD thus far.

Quite underrated, it's quite an enjoyable 90 minute item. Through all of Baby Quintanilla's scene stealing cuteness, Eddie Cantor still gathers enough attention from viewers while Berkeley behind the camera keeps his lens on those youthful and pretty "forty little mothers." Can't blame him for that. Watch for it the next time it's scheduled again on Turner Classic Movies cable channel. (**1/2)
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High concept studio comedy
jarrodmcdonald-11 March 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Judith Anderson is known for her dramatic roles on stage and screen. In 1940, she had two motion pictures in release at the same time. The first one was REBECCA, in which she played her most well-known role, Mrs. Danvers, an icy cold character who didn't have a sympathetic bone in her body. The other film was FORTY LITTLE MOTHERS, a high concept studio comedy produced by MGM which costarred Eddie Cantor, a baby and a bevy of young starlets.

FORTY LITTLE MOTHERS was based on a French farce called LE MIOCHE, that had been made in France a few years earlier. (Le Mioche means 'the tyke' in English.) The story was also filmed in Italy in the 1950s, and that time it was known as ONE HUNDRED LITTLE MOTHERS.

It's interesting to see Miss Anderson playing a more maternal type, the complete antithesis of her assignment in the Hitchcock drama. In this story, Anderson shepherds more than three dozen young girls, all with designs on motherhood. Mr. Cantor is mixed up in the proceedings, when a little child is placed into his care. This would be Cantor's only picture at MGM.

Somehow the wacky premise and the unusual casting work. It works so well, in fact, that one wishes a sequel had been produced. Cantor was usually seen in big budget spectacles turned out by Samuel Goldwyn. Those pictures were typically variety shows, with a hodgepodge of skits and musical numbers. There is none of that in this picture. Surprising because the director is Busby Berkeley, of all people.

Mr. Cantor, for his part, is usually found in variety shows, or at least movies with big scale musical numbers. There is none of that in this picture. Surprising because the director is Busby Berkeley, of all people.
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6/10
Worth a watch.
rfox-4751521 June 2019
Eddie Cantor's facial expressions make the movie. It starts slow and then draws you in. The cast is well done from the obnoxious teenage girls to the stereotype school matrons.
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7/10
some fun
SnoopyStyle15 May 2022
Unemployed professor Gilbert Jordan Thompson saves a woman from committing suicide. Later, he finds an abandoned baby in a train station. He decides to take care of the baby. The baby's mother is still searching for him and she happens to be the woman who tried to commit suicide. Professor Thompson gets a job teaching an all-girls school. The girls are not that pleased with him and schemes to get rid him until they discover his baby.

The kid is cute and there is some fun with him. The premise has a few too many elements. I would cut out the suicide. It's a little odd for a comedy to start with that turn. The girls are somewhat interchangeable with Doris as the leader. I don't mind Eddie Cantor but his quietness and sadness does leave him as a bit of a stepover. This has some fun with an unusual premise and it has a very cute baby.
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7/10
Cantor is wasted in sentimental story
JohnHowardReid12 July 2009
Slightly reminiscent of Metro's later Red Skelton musical, "Bathing Beauty" in that most of the action centers around a lone male in a girls' school, "Forty Little Mothers" is much less funny. Indeed most of the comic opportunities in the script seem to have been deliberately bypassed. This accent on the dramatic rather than the comic is unfortunate, as the drama becomes corny and sentimental. True, Cantor is allowed to make a few quips and sing a song, entitled "Little Curly Hair in a High Chair" by Harry Tobias (or his brother, Charles Tobias, depending on which reference book you consult) and Nat Simon. On the other hand, although the movie's direction is credited to Busby Berkeley, anyone expecting lavish Berkeley production numbers here is going to be mightily disappointed. There are none!
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6/10
Remake of a better film
daviuquintultimate31 July 2023
Funny that nobody mentions that "Fourty Little Mothers" is a remake of Hugo Haas' and Jan Alfréd Holmans's 1937 Czech film "Devcata, nedejte se!", which is, in its turn, a remake of (or it's highly inspired by) 1936 French film "Le Mioche", directed by Léonid Moguy. I am familiar just with "Devcata", and, in my opinion, this is a far more brilliant and deeply moving movie. Maybe it can be found on commercial circuits, I don't know: in a very famous online platform, "Devcata, nedejte se!" can be found and watched, for free. But only in Czech, and without captions. This is not a particular handicap: as in most good works of cinematic art you will be able to catch (almost) all of its meaning even if you don't know the language.
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10/10
Absolutely marvelous--so why is this film rating so low on IMDb??!!
planktonrules22 September 2007
Warning: Spoilers
This is a marvelous film from start to finish and is one of the sweetest flicks I have seen in many years. Yet in spite of this, as of this date, the film only has an IMDb score of 6.0. I just don't understand this, as the writing, acting and production are just great and it probably is Eddie Cantor's best film (even better than THANK YOUR LUCKY STARS).

Eddie plays a down and out college professor who is out of work and down to his last dollar. Just when things look blackest, he stumbles upon a young lady who is about to kill herself. Cantor is a sweet guy and so he saves her life and gets her a job--a job Cantor himself needed. However, in all the confusion, the lady forgot her child and when Eddie later discovers this adorable kid, he has no idea whose child it is--all he finds is a note pinned to him asking whoever finds it to care for him. Well, good Samaritan Eddie can't bring himself to take the kid to an orphanage and so he takes the baby home. Why he did this actually made a lot of sense as the baby who played this part was the most adorable and sweet child I have ever seen in a movie. I don't mean in a cloying way, but you just can't help but smile every time the tot enters a scene. I watched the film with my wife and daughter and their hearts also melted each time the baby appeared.

Despite being poor, Eddie's luck changes when an old friend discovers his plight and gets him a job at a girls college. However, the young ladies are NOT thrilled with having a new and not particularly attractive teacher--they want their gorgeous old professor! So, they make life just awful for poor little Eddie through much of the film. This is really funny, but you really feel sorry for the guy as the girls (led by the as usual spunky Bonita Granville) are very cruel.

Later, when the girls discover that Eddie is a nice guy AND he's hiding a baby in his on-campus apartment, they feel sorry for him and actually help raise the baby. Plus, as faculty are NOT allowed to have young children, they also help him conceal the child. Later, when the mother finally catches up to her lost child, this leads to a conclusion that is both very funny and extremely heart-warming.

While I am definitely a bit of a curmudgeon when I review many films on IMDb, I was totally captivated by this film and its schmaltziness worked perfectly--never being too cloying or saccharine. Much of this could be attributed to the magnificent script and deft direction, but most of this should rightfully be attributed to Cantor. He was just wonderful as the baby's foster-dad and their scenes together (particulary towards the beginning of the film) were charming and warm. If he didn't love and adore this baby, you could have fooled me. Plus, unlike some Cantor films, his style is rather understated and he really carried the film. Also, unlike some Cantor films he does not dance and his jokes were not at the expense of the plot--being perfectly integrated into the movie. And, while he always sings in his films, he only has one song in FORTY LITTLE MOTHERS, but when he sings it, tears welled up inside--he really put that song across with grace and style.

All-in-all, this is one great film that unfortunately has been pretty much forgotten. Unless you are an old grouch (or even if you are), see this film and appreciate just how wonderful a little picture like this can be.
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5/10
Cantor goes from popeyed to gooey eyed.
mark.waltz16 April 2017
Warning: Spoilers
A bunch of bratty college age girls are forced to look at themselves in this overly sentimental comedy drama (with a few songs added), raising the sugar count in my system to diabetic coma level. Finding an abandoned baby in a train station, impoverished professor Eddie Cantor must hide him when he gets a job at an all girls college. Wrongly blaming him for the firing of a teacher they all had a crush on, these girls (which includes a young Veronica Lake) attempt all sorts of schemes to expose him to school head Judith Anderson. But when they realize the truth, they change their tune and apologize. One girl proclaims, "We didn't mean to hurt you", to which the obvious response is, "Ah, yes you did."

If the screeching young females (including one with an extremely annoyingly cheery southern accent) don't sound like nails down a chalkboard to you, try the coo's and laughs from Baby Quintinella as the oh so cute toddler. Cantor sings a nursery rhyme to him that won't ever be a threat to "If You Knew Susie". A far cry from his earlier Goldwyn films, this has its share of amusing moments, most notably Anderson's overly dramatic reading of a love letter and assistant Nydia Westman's fluttery reaction to its "intenseness". It's an odd film in the career of much of its cast and director Busby Berkeley, but for me, it will remain interesting for Anderson's lighter take (still wearing Mrs. Danvers long severe black dresses), one of the rare times she was able to "let loose" on film.
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10/10
40 Girls and a Baby
dntn13 June 2006
This movie is one of the most tenderhearted that I have seen in a long time. I was surprised by how touching some of the scenes were. If you can convince your kids to watch a b&w movie, it is an excellent family movie. There were even a few places in the movie that made me almost cry. Briefly, it is the story of an out-of-work teacher who finds an abandoned baby after saving a young woman from suicide. How he deals with his growing attachment to the baby, and his new job, makes for a wonderfully warm movie. Eddie Cantor was an excellent choice for the lead part, although he only sings one song in the movie. Also, the baby in this movie really steals the show.
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5/10
This is not who Eddie Cantor was
vincentlynch-moonoi6 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I wondered if anyone else in this country even knew any more who Eddie Cantor was. He was, of course, one of the greatest performers of the early 1900s, perhaps only second to Al Jolson. So I was delighted to discover this film on Turner Classic Movies and wondered how I had never seen it before.

Unfortunately, I discovered that this was one of the dumbest movies I've ever seen and, what's worse, it would give no modern viewer any idea at all who Eddie Cantor the performer was. He was a song and dance man...a light comedian...and we see none of that here. I will admit that his good hearted nature comes through here, but what made him so famous...it's not here...not at all.

Plus, as I indicated, the story is just idiotic. As a former teacher and retired principal, no kids are this mean or childish. It's just plain foolish.

Tell you what. You wanna know who Eddie Cantor was. Bring up some of his videos on You Tube. Listen to some of his songs he recorded not long before his death. Find some of his television shows from the early 1950s. Then you'll get an idea of who Eddie Cantor was.
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9/10
Eddie Cantor could act!
morrisonhimself31 July 2010
In most of his roles, Eddie Cantor mostly did his stage performance, clapping his hands and rolling his eyes, but in "Forty Little Mothers," he had a role completely out of character.

And he was great! I tuned in to Turner Classic Movies (July, 2010) expecting a bit of fluff, a chance to rest from my Internet labors, and was I happily surprised.

Besides Cantor, one of my favorite screen females, Bonita Granville, was there, as were many talented if not entirely well-known actors and actresses.

There was some good writing, even if the story presentation itself was a bit uneven.

All in all, "Forty Little Mothers" is a sweet, well-done movie that I highly recommend.
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8/10
I fell in love
cyncare12 September 2020
I fell in love with Eddie Cantor. He was so good, NowI want to watch all of his movies. I also enjoyed seeing life in that time period. It was a different world.
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8/10
Cantor and Berkeley, somewhat out of character
weezeralfalfa31 July 2017
Warning: Spoilers
It's a cute screenplay, with a cuter baby as the main 'prop'. Rather reminds me of a film a few years later: "Bathing Beauty", in which Red Skelton somehow is accepted as a student in an all girls' school. That was much more of a gaudy musical comedy than the present film, but minus a baby as a main character. Along with Esther Williams' water shows, it featured 2 big name bands, as well as comedy mainly relating to Red. Also, it was filmed in Technicolor vs. the B&W of the present film.

There is only one new song that Eddie Cantor sings, plus a new song : The Canford School Song", sung by the attendants to a school reunion at the beginning of the film. In addition, the school girls, as a group, sing a number of standards, including the well remembered Arthur Freed/Nacio Herb Brown hit "You Were Meant for Me", which was the theme song for "Penny Serenade": released the following year, and was an important song in "Singing in the Rain". The theme song, which Eddie initially sings to the baby('Chum'), is "Little Curly Hair in a High Chair". It's quite a memorable tune, and is reprised as a group sing in the finale.

Eddie plays a kindly legitimate, if nearly destitute, professor, instead of his usual little schnook character. He's out of work, and happens upon a young woman(Marian) who's despondent about her husband abandoning her and her baby boy. Eddie surmises that she's about to jump off the pier, and grabs and talks to her. He takes her to a nearby restaurant, and talks some more, facilitating her getting a job at the restaurant as a waitress. Eddie leaves and finds the baby in a basket, with no apparent caretaker around. He finds a note in the basket implying an abandonment.

Meanwhile, after job training, Marian goes to reclaim her baby, but finds it gone. Eventually, she contacts the Department of Missing Persons, who eventually trace the baby to Eddie via a judge to talked to him about stealing a bottle of milk and suggested he apply for a job opening at Granville Girls School. The outgoing male teacher had been dismissed for flirting with the girls. He was quite popular with the girls, whereas Eddie seemed much more nerdy and homely. Thus, the girls devised various tricks to make Eddie want to leave, and make the head mistress want to fire him. These tricks are often amusing, eventually involving attempts to convince him they love him(in a romantic way), so that he will be fired.

Eventually, the poor woman that Eddie had left the baby with, showed up and said she couldn't take care of the baby anymore. So, the baby was sneaked into Eddie's bedroom.. Eventually, the girls, then the head mistress discovered the baby. Whereas the latter fired Eddie for harboring the baby and flirting with the girls, the girls competed to take care of the infant, washing his clothes, knitting clothes, etc.. The girls staged a mutiny until Eddie was reinstated. In the finale, it's evident that Eddie has been reinstated. "Chum" seems to have been adopted by the class. It's unclear to me what Marian's status is now. She is there singing with the group. Did she marry Eddie? Is she a student? Or perhaps she just hasn't left yet? She could be charged with child abandonment, and Eddie could be charged with kidnaping.

It's always a treat to 'discover' another Eddie Cantor film. This one had been swept under the rug. But, I found it at YouTube, and it doesn't disappoint, with Eddie doing more drama and less slapstick and musicals than usual. Busby Berkeley, known for his distinctive choreography, as well as directorship, had worked with Eddie in some of his early films. Currently he was also directing the Mickey & Judy musical series, incorporating a few lavish dance numbers into each film. But, there's no such number in this film.

Other films I'm familiar with that feature men being suddenly called upon to take care of an unfamiliar infant include "Three Men and a Baby", and "3 Godfathers". In the latter, John Wayne carries on alone under very trying conditions, after his 2 partners die.
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