There's No Business Like Show Business Synopsis & Summary

Synopsis

Like Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938), 20th Century-Fox's There's No Business Like Show Business is a "catalogue" film, its thinnish plot held together by an itinerary of Irving Berlin tunes. The story chronicles some twenty years in the lives of a showbiz family, headed by Dan Dailey and Ethel Merman. Two of the couple's three grown children -- Donald O'Connor and Mitzi Gaynor -- carry on the family tradition, while the third, Johnny Ray, decides to become a priest. There are a few tense moments when O'Connor falls in love with ambitious chorine Marilyn Monroe and loses all sense of perspective, but the family reunites during a splashy production-number finale. Highlights include Dailey and Merman's Play a Simple Melody duet, O'Connor's A Man Chases a Girl solo, and Monroe's tempestuous rendition of Heat Wave (her delivery and stage presence both compensate for her unflattering bare-midriff costume). Of historical interest, There's No Business Like Show Business was Fox's first CinemaScope musical; as such, it is best viewed on TV in "letterbox" format. - Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Movie Info

Theatrical Release Date:
06/12/2004
DVD Release Date:
05/29/2001
Rating:
Not Yet Rated
Run Time:
117 min.
Production Co.:
20th Century Fox, Darryl F. Zanuck Productions
Director(s):
Genre(s):
Themes:
Dancer's Life, Actor's Life, Parenthood
Tone:
Nostalgic, Stylized, Humorous, Light, Warm, Heartwarming, Upbeat
Keywords:
chorus-girl, extramarital-affair, family, parent/child-relationship, performer, priest, show-business
Language:
English
Status:
DVD