Annie In 1933, after the
Great Depression, a young
orphan named Annie Bennett is living in the Hudson St. Home for Girls in
New York City, which is run by Miss Hannigan, a cruel
alcoholic who forces the orphans to clean the building daily. With half of a locket as her only possession, Annie remains optimistic that her parents, who left her on the doorstep as a baby, will return for her. Annie sneaks out with help from a laundry man and adopts a stray dog, which she names Sandy, though she is quickly found and brought back to the orphanage. Grace Farrell, secretary to billionaire
Oliver Warbucks, arrives to invite an orphan to live with Warbucks for a week in order to improve his public image. Annie is chosen and she and Sandy travel to Warbucks' mansion. Though she is welcomed by the staff, Warbucks is disappointed as he wanted a boy orphan. However, he is quickly charmed into letting her stay after taking her sight-seeing in
New York City. Later, he meets with Miss Hannigan, convincing her to sign the adoption papers while she drunkenly tries to seduce him. Warbucks reveals his plans to Annie, even offering her a new locket, but she declines. She explains the purpose of her broken locket and her hope that her parents will return with the other half. Warbucks appears on a
radio show and offers a $50,000 reward to find Annie's parents, attracting the attention of Hannigan's brother and con-artist "Rooster" and his girlfriend Lily St. Regis. Hannigan, Rooster, and Lily devise a plan to pose as Annie's birth parents and use the other half of her locket as proof. Annie's friends overhear the conversation and try to sneak out, but are caught and locked away. Meanwhile, Annie and Warbucks fly to the
White House to talk with
President Franklin D. Roosevelt and his wife
Eleanor. Roosevelt informs them of his plan to introduce a social welfare program to help America's impoverished and asks Warbucks to head it. Later, Rooster and Lily arrive and pretend to be Annie's parents. As they have the locket, Warbucks and Grace believe them. They ask Annie to stay one more night for
Christmas Eve festivities and Rooster and Lily reluctantly agree. When they return the next day, they attempt to take Annie but are confronted by FDR, who reveals Lily and Rooster's true identities. They are both arrested and Miss Hannigan arrives with the orphans. Though Hannigan tries to sweet talk her way into staying at the mansion but is arrested as well. The orphans are all given presents and Annie is officially adopted by Warbucks.
Sequels ''Annie 2: Miss Hannigan's Revenge'' Daddy Warbucks discovers that he has to be married to officially adopt Annie...apparently. So he decides to throw a nationwide contest to find his new wife, with Annie and the United Mothers of America head, Mrs. Christmas, helping him to decide. Meanwhile, Miss Hannigan escapes from prison and, hearing about this contest, disguises herself as “Charlotte O’Hara”. She finds a girl that looks identical to Annie and successfully sneaks into the contest. She kidnaps the real Annie and replaces her with the doppelg-Annie-r. It all leads to a climax of chasing, wrestling, and arresting. ''Annie 2: Miss Hannigan's Revenge'' was performed December 22, 1989 through January 20, 1990 in Washington, DC. While it originally planned to trasnfer to Broadway, but this was cancelled after negative reviews. As with the first musical, it was written by
Charles Strouse and
Martin Charnin.
Annie Warbucks On Christmas morning in 1933, Child Welfare Commissioner Harriet Doyle arrives on the scene to inform Daddy Warbucks he must marry within sixty days or else the child will be returned to the orphanage. Daddy Warbucks' whirlwind search for a fitting bride uncovers not only a plot by Doyle and her daughter Sheila Kelly to strip him of his fortune, but also his true feelings for his long-time assistant, Grace Farrell. A gaggle of cute little girls seeking parents and President Franklin D. Roosevelt return to take part in the shenanigans. == Theatrical films ==