The story of Frankie and Johnny has been the inspiration for several films, including
Her Man (1930, starring
Helen Twelvetrees),
Frankie and Johnny (1936, starring
Helen Morgan), and
Frankie and Johnny (1966, starring
Elvis Presley).
Terrence McNally's 1987 play,
Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune, was adapted for a 1991 film titled
Frankie and Johnny starring
Al Pacino and
Michelle Pfeiffer. In 1930, director and actor
John Huston wrote and produced a puppet play titled
Frankie and Johnnie based on the Frankie Baker case. One of Huston's main sources was his interview with Baker and Britt's neighbor Richard Clay. Comedian
Harry Langdon performed the song in his 1930 short
The Fighting Parson, in a variant on his
vaudeville routine originally performed in
blackface.
Mae West inserted her ballad into her successful Broadway play
Diamond Lil. West sang the ballad again in her 1933
Paramount film
She Done Him Wrong, which takes its title from the refrain, substituting genders. She also sang it many years later (1978) on the
CBS television special
Back Lot U.S.A. The song was used in the 1932 film
Red-Headed Woman, in a scene where actress
Jean Harlow's character is drinking and lamenting having been jilted by her married lover. It is also sung by a river boat crew in
Bed of Roses, a film released the following year. Yvonne De Carlo sings the song while masquerading as an opera singer in the 1949 film
The Gal Who Took the West.
Moira Kelly sings it in the 1996 film
Entertaining Angels: The Dorothy Day Story. The 1933
pre-Code film
Arizona to Broadway features drag performer
Gene Malin singing this song as he portrays Ray Best, a female impersonator and Mae West type. Malin's performance is considered one of the earliest performances, if not the earliest, of a female impersonator on film. A dazzling musical number from the 1956
MGM film
Meet Me in Las Vegas featured
Cyd Charisse and dancer
John Brascia acting out the roles of Frankie and Johnny while
Sammy Davis Jr. sang the song.
Mia Farrow, in the role of Jacqueline De Bellefort, sang/hummed a drunken rendition of the song in the 1978 version of
Agatha Christie's
Death on the Nile, just before she attempts to shoot her former lover, Simon Doyle, played by
Simon MacCorkindale.
Noah Baumbach's 1997 film
Highball features a scene where this song is sung as a karaoke tune. The climax of
Robert Altman's 2006 film
A Prairie Home Companion is
Lindsay Lohan's rendition of the song with quasi-improvisatory lyrics by
Garrison Keillor. The tune is often used for comic effect in animated cartoon shorts, such as the 1932 Disney cartoon
The Klondike Kid (starring
Mickey Mouse) and various ones produced by
Warner Bros. or
MGM in the 1940s and 1950s, as a theme or leitmotif for a
meretricious or
zaftig woman. The song was the basis of a 1951
UPA cartoon
Rooty Toot Toot, directed by
John Hubley. It was nominated for an
Academy Award for
Best Short Subject. A comedic live action usage comes in the
blaxploitation film
Petey Wheatstraw where a woman auditions by singing the song
off-key, prompting a crude reply from Petey. The song's intro is featured in the 1929 film
Weary River. It is sung by the main character Jerry Larrabee played by
Richard Barthelmess. The character is a gangster reformed by music.
Weary River costars
Betty Compson, who played Alice Gray, the faithful sweetheart of Larrabee, who did not like him singing
Frankie and Johnny. A remarkable feature of this film is part silent film and part talkie. The film which was directed by Frank Lloyd, who was nominated for an
Academy Award for Best Directing. ==Other media==