The film is styled in the same format as was the earlier
MGM film
The Hollywood Revue of 1929. Because of the film's high budget, although it performed well at the box office, it did not return as much profit as did
The Hollywood Revue of 1929.
Show of Shows was originally intended as an all-color sound film and promoted as such, but 21 minutes were shot in
black and white—17 minutes of the first part and the first four minutes of part two. The film features nearly all of the stars under contract with Warner Bros, most of whom vanished from the studio by 1931 after tastes had shifted as a result of the
Great Depression.
Show of Shows features many stars of silent films as well as stage and novelty acts.
Frank Fay appears as the master of ceremonies.
Segments •
Prologue — A scene set in the
French Revolution, with
William Courtenay as a priest,
Hobart Bosworth as an executioner and
H.B. Warner as an
aristocrat who is executed on a
guillotine. •
"Military March"— A pageant led by
Monte Blue and Pasadena American Legion Fife and Drum Corps set entirely on a huge set of steps with the cadets changing formation to provide a series of color effects in a manner that would be popularized much later by
Busby Berkeley. • '''"What's Become of the Floradora Boys?"''' —
Alice Day,
Lila Lee,
Myrna Loy,
Patsy Ruth Miller,
Marian Nixon,
Sally O'Neil,
Ben Turpin,
Heinie Conklin,
Lupino Lane,
Lee Moran,
Bert Roach and
Lloyd Hamilton appear in a partial parody of the
Florodora Edwardian stage show. •
"$20 Bet"— Fay attempts to sing but is constantly interrupted by
Chester Morris,
Jack Mulhall and
Sojin Kamiyama. •
"Motion Picture Pirates" —
Ted Lewis leads a fantasy number set on a pirate ship with
Noah Beery,
Tully Marshall,
Wheeler Oakman,
Kalla Pasha,
Bull Montana,
Anders Randolf and other well-known screen villains. A group of beautiful girls are captured and saved by light comedian
Johnny Arthur parodying
Douglas Fairbanks. The day is saved by bandleader
Ted Lewis. •
"If I Could Learn to Love (As Well as I Fight)" — In a brief introductory sequence, missing from circulating prints, French boxer
Georges Carpentier is introduced by Fay, who provokes Carpentier into lightly tapping him with his formidable hands, to which Fay comically overreacts. Carpentier sings against an
Eiffel Tower backdrop accompanied by
Patsy Ruth Miller and
Alice White and a chorus of girls. A precision dance routine follows, with the performers on an upright series of geometric struts. •
"Dear Little Pup" — Black-and-white sequence featuring Fay. •
"Pingo Pongo" — Black-and-white sequence featuring
Winnie Lightner. •
"The Only Song I Know" — Black-and-white sequence featuring
Nick Lucas. •
"Recitations" — Featuring
Beatrice Lillie,
Louise Fazenda,
Lloyd Hamilton and Fay, the sequence is a series of stark
poetic recitations that are performed by each performer whole and then line by line, and when the lines are mixed, they describe a bizarre and suggestive product. The sequence also includes a parody of the song "Your Mother and Mine" and a series of jokes. •
"Meet My Sister" — The feature is introduced by a deliberately nervous
Richard Barthelmess followed by Hollywood sisters, including
Dolores and
Helene Costello, singing "My Sister", along with
Loretta Young and
Sally Blane,
Sally O'Neil and
Molly O'Day,
Alice Day and
Marceline Day,
Marion Byron and Harriette Lake (later known as
Ann Sothern),
Viola Dana and
Shirley Mason,
Lola and
Armida Vendrell and
Alberta and
Adamae Vaughn. All of the pairs were sisters in real life except for Byron and Lake, who were not related. Each set of twins represent a different country with corresponding backdrops. •
Intermission— A title card is shown. This is missing from some prints. • '''"
Singin' in the Bathtub"''' —
Winnie Lightner and male
chorines parody "
Singin' in the Rain" against a bathroom set, and with Lightner and former wrestler
Bull Montana sing a parody of the MGM song "
You Were Meant for Me" from the 1929 film
The Broadway Melody. This number was originally slightly longer, and was also printed in black and white on the release prints. •
"Just an Hour of Love" – Performed by
Irene Bordoni. •
"A Chinese Fantasy" — Canine performer
Rin Tin Tin barks, with
Nick Lucas singing "Li-Po-Li" and
Myrna Loy dancing. •
"Frank Fay with Sid Silvers" —
Sid Silvers is featured in a comedy sketch as an annoying spectator who is auditioning for a solo spot by showing Fay his imitation of
Al Jolson singing "
Rock-a-Bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody". •
"A Bicycle Built for Two" — In a
music-hall pastiche,
Chester Conklin,
Douglas Fairbanks Jr,
Chester Morris,
Gertrude Olmstead Sally Eilers and others sing the 1890s standard "
Daisy Bell" against a revolving backdrop. • '''"If Your Best Friend Won't Tell You (Why Should I?)"''' — Silvers and Fay sing about
halitosis. • '''"Larry Ceballos' Black and White Girls"'
— Silvers introduces a segment featuring chorus girls in black-and-white dresses. One half of the girls wear black fronts and white backs (with corresponding wigs) while the others wear outfits with the colors reversed. The dancers switch from white to black or form geometric patterns to the instrumental "Jumping Jack". This is a reworking of a nearly identical dance routine set to "The Doll Dance", which also appeared in the 1928 two-reeler Larry Ceballos' Roof Garden Revue''. The dance appears to begin again but is halted by Louise Fazenda, who complains about the costumes and demands that Fay return to the stage, but he appears without his pants. •
"Your Love Is All I Crave" — Fay sings a
torch song of lost love and introduces the number with a series of topical jokes. • '
"King Richard III (in excerpt from Henry VI, Part 3)"' —
John Barrymore introduces and recites a
Shakespeare extract, and
E. J. Ratcliffe,
Anthony Bushell and Reginald Sharland appear. •
"Mexican Moonshine" —
Monte Blue plays a
condemned man with Fay as his
executioner, accompanied by
Tully Marshall,
Lloyd Hamilton,
Kalla Pasha,
Lee Moran,
Noah Beery and
Albert Gran as soldiers. It is a parody of
Chesterfield cigarette advertising. A similar idea, parodying a cigarette advertising slogan, also appears in the opening seconds of
Gold Diggers of Broadway (1929). •
"Lady Luck" — In the film's finale, which lasts more than 15 minutes, the original Technicolor version starts with Alexander Gray singing "Lady Luck" with ladies in sparkly outfits, some of which refer to gambling, walk down the stairs inside an enormous ballroom set with windows revealing a green sky. Two lines of chorus girls come out and do a dance to "Believe Me". More songs are reprised, including "The Only Song I Know", "If I Could Learn to Love (As Well As I Fight)", and "Singin' in the Bathtub" and tap dancers perform on a wooden floor.
Betty Compson walks the stage to meet Alexander Gray, and with the whole cast assembled, hundreds of colored streamers drop from the roof. •
"Curtain of Stars" — The cast appear with their heads poked through holes in canvas, singing "Lady Luck".
Songs featured • "You Were Meant For Me" — Music by
Nacio Herb Brown, lyrics by
Arthur Freed • "Singin' in the Bathtub" — Music by Michael Cleary, lyrics by
Herb Magidson and
Ned Washington • "Lady Luck" — Music and Lyrics by Ray Perkins • "Pirate Band" — Music by M.K. Jerome, lyrics by
J. Keirn Brennan • "If I Could Learn to Love (As Well as I Fight)" — Music by M.K. Jerome, lyrics by Herman Ruby • "Pingo Pongo" — Music by
Joseph Burke, lyrics by
Al Dubin • "The Only Song I Know" — Music by Ray Perkins, lyrics by J. Keirn Brennan • "My Sister" — Music by Ray Perkins, lyrics by J. Keirn Brennan • "Your Mother and Mine" — Music by
Gus Edwards, lyrics by Joe Goodwin • "Just an Hour of Love" — Music by
Edward Ward, lyrics by
Alfred Bryan • "Li-Po-Li" — Music by Edward Ward, lyrics by Alfred Bryan • "
Rock-A-Bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody" — Music by
Jean Schwartz, lyrics by
Sam M. Lewis and
Joe Young • "If Your Best Friend Won't Tell You" — Music by Joseph Burke, lyrics by Al Dubin • "Your Love is All that I Crave" — Music by Jimmy Johnson, lyrics by
Perry Bradford and Al Dubin • "What's Become of the Floradora Boys?" — Music and lyrics by Ray Perkins • "Dear Little Pup" — Music by Ray Perkins, lyrics by
J. Keirn Brennan • "Daisy Bell (Bicycle Built for Two)" — written by Harry Dacre • "Believe Me" — Music by Edward Ward, lyrics by Alfred Bryan == Cast ==