Shoeshiners have featured in:
Film and television •
Shoe Shine Boy, a 1943 film musical •
Shoeshine, a 1946 Italian film which received honours at the 1948
Academy Awards •
Boot Polish, a 1954
Hindi film •
El Bolero de Raquel, 1956
Mexican film starring
Cantinflas •
Prince of Space, a 1959 science-fiction film •
Underdog, a 1964
animated television series in which an
anthropomorphic dog,
Shoeshine Boy, battles crime as the titular canine
superhero. •
The Adventures of Timothy Pilgrim, a 1975 Canadian children's TV series •
Goodfellas,
Martin Scorsese's 1990 gangster film, features a scene in which hair trigger-tempered
Lucchese crime family wiseguy, Tommy DeVito (
Joe Pesci), brutally beats
Gambino crime family mobster, Billy Batts (
Frank Vincent), for insulting him about being a shoeshine boy in Tommy's younger days. The film is based on the real-life experiences of
Henry Hill and the people he met through the
Vario brothers, who owned a shoeshine stand and other businesses. In real life,
William "Billy Batts" Bentvena taunted
Thomas "Two Gun Tommy" DeSimone, calling him "spit-shine Tommy". DeSimone retorted by yelling, "Shine
these fuckin' shoes", and then executing Batts. •
Parks and Recreation, a 2009 American TV show, in which
Andy Dwyer, one of the main characters gets a job in Pawnee City Hall shining shoes. •
Le Havre,
Aki Kaurismäki, 2011. •
Coco, a 2017 film, in which the character of Miguel worked as a shoeshiner before going into
shoemaking. •
Police Squad!, the spoof police procedural starring
Leslie Nielsen featured a shoe shiner called Johnny, played by
William Duell. As well as shining shoes and giving inside info on the latest case to main character
Frank Drebin, Johnny appeared to have a vast knowledge of just about any subject his customers would ask him about, from fire safety to medical procedures, for a small tip.
Tommy Lasorda and
Dick Clark both had cameo appearances on
Police Squad! playing themselves visiting Johnny's shoeshine stand, with Lasorda asking for advice on his pitching rotation and Clark inquiring about
ska, then a musical genre which was starting to receive some mainstream attention, as well as receiving some anti-aging cream.
Literature and publications as
Sam Weller blacking boots (1837) •
Sam Weller, fictional
Cockney bootblack in
The Pickwick Papers (1836) by
Charles Dickens. •
Ragged Dick, an 1867 dime novel by
Horatio Alger Jr. about a poor but honest shoeshiner and his rise to middle-class comfort and respectability through good moral behavior, clean living, and determination.
Shine!, a musical based on Alger's work, particularly
Ragged Dick, was produced in 1982. •
Rajbahadur Bakhia the arch-villain in novels of
Surender Mohan Pathak, was originally a shoeshiner at
flora fountain area of
Mumbai, and had his introduction with
underworld over a payment dispute with a small-time gangster who refused to pay him. •
Scrooge McDuck, the
Dell Comics character, famously won his
Number One Dime shining shoes.
Music • The opening lines of "
Chattanooga Choo Choo" (1941) are dialogue between a passenger and a shoeshine boy. • "
Chattanoogie Shoe Shine Boy" (1949), a song performed by
Red Foley,
Bing Crosby,
Scatman Crothers, and
Frank Sinatra among others. • In "
Get Rhythm" (1956), written and performed by
Johnny Cash, the song's narrator asks a "little shoeshine boy" who has "the dirtiest job in town" how he keeps from getting the blues. The shoeshine boy "grinned as he raised his little head / He popped a shoeshine rag, and then he said / Get rhythm..." • "
Shoeshine Man" (1970), a song by
Tom T. Hall. ==See also==