Development After the commercial success of
The Cocoanuts,
Variety announced that
Paramount Pictures signed on the
Marx Brothers for a follow-up film in February 1930. Paramount had yet to secure the rights to
Animal Crackers, the brothers' then-current
Broadway musical, from producer
Sam H. Harris. The studio instead planned to commission an original screenplay from
Ben Hecht. In March, it was reported that Paramount obtained the film rights and began
pre-production, with the goal of commencing filming in May. The stage-to-screen adaptation presented challenges during the early
sound era. The original cut of
The Cocoanuts was longer than the musical itself; it had to be cut extensively to achieve a shorter runtime. To avoid the same problem, Paramount enlisted co-author
Morrie Ryskind to accompany the Marx Brothers on tour and observe performances to identify material suitable for elimination. The
adaptation process involved numerous revisions that changed the original structure of the stage version. Some characters and scenes were removed, and roles were consolidated. The female love interest was merged with the Arabella Rittenhouse character, while wealthy financier Roscoe Chandler was combined with art dealer Monsieur Doucet. Paramount hired Victor Heerman as
director partly due to his reputation for maintaining discipline with performers, as both the Marx Brothers and
Lillian Roth were known for unprofessional behavior on set. Heerman also contributed to cuts, insisting on the removal of most of the musical numbers, including the play's grand finale, which featured the brothers as 18th-century French courtiers romancing
Madame du Barry. When the Marx Brothers, Ryskind, and composers
Bert Kalmar and
Harry Ruby objected to removing the musical elements, Heerman held a
test screening with early footage. The test audience's enthusiastic response convinced the creative team to support Heerman's vision. However, he agreed to retain "Hooray for Captain Spaulding" at Ryskind's urging. Much of the cast, including the Marx Brothers,
Robert Greig,
Margaret Dumont,
Louis Sorin, and
Margaret Irving, reprised their roles from the Broadway production. The love interests from the play—Alice Wood as Arabella Rittenhouse and Milton Watson as John Parker—were replaced by Roth and Hal Thompson. Roth's involvement in the production, however, was reportedly involuntary. In her autobiography ''
I'll Cry Tomorrow'', Roth recalled that
B. P. Schulberg, Paramount's head of West Coast production, told her she was being sent to New York "to be kicked in the rear by the Marx Brothers" as punishment for her difficult behavior on set.
Filming Principal photography began at
Astoria Studios in
Queens on April 28, 1930. Art director William Saulter designed the elaborate Rittenhouse manor set with a detailed lawn and interior. At the time, it was the largest set ever built at Astoria. Like other studios, Paramount faced significant challenges in capturing quality audio recordings during the early sound era.
The Cocoanuts was notably hampered by primitive sound recording technology, forcing directors to use cumbersome workarounds to reduce background noise; these included minimizing camera movement and soaking paper props in water to prevent audible crinkling. While recording technology had advanced by 1930, eliminating most of these constraints, music still required on-set recording rather than post-production dubbing, a constraint that complicated the editing process. Because the middle of a scene could not be cut without an abrupt musical break, director Victor Heerman recalled that the music department ultimately chose which take was used, once preferring a take where Groucho had moved out of shot because "the clarinet sounded much better". During screen tests, some shots were filmed using the
Multicolor process. This footage, which is the earliest known color film of the Marx Brothers, features Harpo without his usual costume and wig. It was later incorporated into the
short film Wonderland of California. Because only four Multicolor cameras existed, shooting the film entirely in color was impractical. Instead, the sequence was used to help persuade
Howard Hughes to invest in the color process. Approximately 15 seconds of this test footage resurfaced in the 1990s and aired as part of the 1998
Turner Classic Movies documentary
Glorious Technicolor. Lillian Roth remembered the filming as "one step removed from a circus", with the Marx Brothers regularly arriving late, taking long lunches, and leaving early. To manage them, Heerman assigned an assistant director to track each of them. Rumors persisted that Heerman had constructed an actual jail cell to confine the brothers, but he denied this: "These were adult men", Heerman recalled, "and they didn't have to be locked in". Contemporary reports describe a makeup trailer decorated to resemble a jail cell, complete with "Animal Crackers Hoosegow" painted on its exterior. It was never locked, but served as a relaxation space for the performers. Principal photography for
Animal Crackers was complete by mid-June, although Harpo, who had developed
glandular fever, had to be brought back over the
Fourth of July weekend to film his harp solo.
Censorship After the
Motion Picture Production Code was adopted by the film industry in 1930, the producers of
Animal Crackers had to submit their script for approval prior to filming. Even though the code was not strictly enforced before 1934, censors still had much of the material removed or altered during pre-production. References to Arabella Rittenhouse's drinking were cut, including the line, "Don't worry, mother, I won't disgrace you. I can hold my liquor with any of them." The censors also removed references to
Mussolini and required changes to Jamison's lyrics, transforming "the women hot, the champagne cold" to "the women warm, the champagne cold". After filming was complete, censors suggested more cuts, but the studio largely ignored them. Several
double entendres were proposed for deletion, including the lines, "We took some pictures of the native girls but they weren't developed. We are going back in a couple of weeks", and "Signor Ravelli's first selection will be 'Somewhere My Love Lies Sleeping' with a male chorus." During "Hooray for Captain Spaulding" Groucho's line, "I think I'll try and make her", which followed Mrs. Rittenhouse's declaration, "He is the only white man to cover every acre", was flagged for removal but retained.
Music The majority of the music written by
Kalmar and Ruby for the
Animal Crackers musical was not used in the film. Songs that were present in the musical but removed from the film include "Cool Off" and "The Long Island Low-Down", sung by Grace Carpenter; "News", "When Things Are Bright and Rosy", "Who's Been Listening to My Heart?", and "Watching the Clouds Roll By", sung by the romantic leads; the ensemble piece "Go Places and Do Things"; and a Marx Brothers piece from the cut du Barry scene, "We're Four of the Three Musketeers". The opening number, led by Hives, was shortened; the original version contained several additional verses, including parts sung by the maids and guests. The romantic leads' shared song, "Why Am I So Romantic", was written specifically for the film. The film features the following musical numbers, all written by Kalmar and Ruby unless otherwise indicated: • Opening (performed by Hives and Footmen) • "I Represent the Captain" (performed by Zeppo Marx) • "
Hooray for Captain Spaulding" Part I (performed by the cast) • "
Hello, I Must Be Going" (performed by Groucho Marx) • "Hooray for Captain Spaulding" Part II (performed by the cast) • "Why Am I So Romantic?" (performed by Lillian Roth and Hal Thompson, with a harp interlude by Harpo Marx) • "I'm Daffy Over You" (composed and performed by Chico Marx) • "
Silver Threads Among the Gold" (traditional, performed by Chico Marx) • Brief piano interlude (performed by Harpo Marx) • "Gypsy-Chorus" ("
Anvil Chorus") (Giuseppe Verdi, performed by Chico Marx) • "
My Old Kentucky Home" (traditional, performed by the Marx Brothers)
Chico Marx's piano composition "I'm Daffy Over You" became his signature tune. It was featured again in their next feature film,
Monkey Business (1931) and is heard briefly in
Horse Feathers (1932). Chico can be heard playing the song in his final appearance, in the television pilot
Deputy Seraph. == Themes ==