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Minstrel Man (film)

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Wikipedia article




{{Infobox film

| name = Minstrel Man

| image =

| image_size =

| caption =

| director =

| producer =

| screenplay =

| story =

| starring =

| music = Leo Erdody

| cinematography = Marcel Le Picard

| editing = Carl Pierson

| distributor = Producers Releasing Corporation

| released =

| runtime = 67 minutes

| country = United States

| language = English

| budget = ~$200,000

}}

'Minstrel Man' is a 1944 American musical drama film directed by Joseph H. Lewis and produced by Producers Releasing Corporation (PRC). It was a vehicle for Broadway and vaudeville headliner Benny Fields.

Plot



Singing star Dixie Boy Johnson and his wife Caroline are jubilant over Dixie's headlining a Broadway show and Caroline's impending motherhood. On opening night, Caroline is rushed to the hospital and Dixie begs to leave the theater and join her, but producer Lew Dunn refuses. Caroline dies in childbirth and Dixie is shattered. He leaves the baby in the care of his friends, Lasses and Mae, and drops out of sight. Presumed dead, Dixie stays undercover and takes an assumed name, as a shipboard entertainer.

Years later, Dunn grooms Dixie's daughter Caroline for stardom in a revival of Dixie's Broadway show. Dixie's former agent Bill Evans sees an opportunity to sue Dunn for damages, and arranges for Dixie to confront his daughter and his old friends.

Cast



*Benny Fields as Dixie Boy Johnson

*Gladys George as Mae White

*Alan Dinehart as Lew Dunn

*Roscoe Karns as Lasses White

*Jerome Cowan as Bill Evans

*Judy Clark as Caroline (daughter, age 16)

*Molly Lamont as (Mrs.) Caroline Johnson

*John Raitt as Finale Singer

Production



Production began in late 1943, but was shut down for four weeks and retooled when various cast and crew members became unavailable. Director Joseph H. Lewis was drafted during production; he was briefly replaced by Edgar G. Ulmer and then Wallace W. Fox. Lewis was released from the army in March 1944 and completed the film.

Female lead Binnie Barnes had a prior commitment to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and had to drop out; she was replaced by Gladys George. The juvenile role was intended for PRC contractee Gerra Young, who was sidelined by illness; she was replaced by Judy Clark."'Minstrel Man' Resumes After Four-Week Layoff," 'Film Daily', March 8, 1944 Character comedian Lee "Lasses" White was replaced by a bigger name, Roscoe Karns; Karns's screen character is still named "Lasses White." White himself remained in the film as "Tiny," featured in the minstrel-show sequence. Production resumed after the scheduling conflicts of cast and crew were resolved.

Producer Leon Fromkess originally budgeted 'Minstrel Man' at $80,000, slightly above average for the very-low-budget PRC studio. When Fromkess saw how well the project was progressing, he allocated more money. Composer Harry Revel co-wrote the original songs with Paul Francis Webster; Revel was equally impressed with the project and invested his own money, earning an "associate producer" credit. The final budget was "more than $200,000", according to 'Variety'."PRC's 'Minstrel Man' Reaching Epic Stage," 'Variety', March 1, 1944

Reception



PRC's most elaborate production was booked into many major first-run theater chains. 'Minstrel Man' became the biggest critical and financial success the company enjoyed. The film was nominated for two Academy Awards: Best Original Score (Ferde Grof and Leo Erdody) and Best Original Song (Harry Revel and Paul Francis Webster).

Songs



* "Remember Me to Carolina" (Harry Revel, Paul Francis Webster; Academy Award nominee) Benny Fields

* "I Don't Care If the World Knows About It" (Revel, Webster) Fields; reprise by Judy Clark

* "Cindy" (Revel, Webster) Fields; reprise by Clark

* "My Bamboo Cane" (Revel, Webster) Fields

* "My Melancholy Baby" (Ernie Burnett, George A. Norton) Fields

* "Shaking Hands with the Sun" (Revel, Webster) John Raitt

* "Minstrel Man" Minstrel chorus, danced by Johnny Boyle

References




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