The first scene opens on a ship headed for Paris. John Kent (Randolph Scott), a former college football hero, is traveling there with his good friend Huck Haines (Fred Astaire), a bandleader who has booked a gig in the city for his dance band, the Wabash Indianians.
Unfortunately, when their client (an excitable club owner played by Luis Alberni) discovers that they're a dance band - not a band of American Indians - he fires them immediately, despite their attempt at changing his mind with a fun, creative performance in which Huck plays the "organ".
Randolph Scott as John and Fred Astaire as Huck |
Astaire et al performing The Pipe Organ Number |
Now in Paris with no job, the group has nowhere to stay and no idea what to do next, until John reveals that his aunt Minnie (played by the fabulous Helen Westley) lives in Paris - and happens to be the famous, wealthy dressmaker "Roberta". He thinks maybe she can help the band land a gig, so he pays her a visit at her dress shop.
Helen Westley as Aunt Minnie |
There John meets Aunt Minnie's assistant Stephanie (Irene Dunne). He is instantly charmed by her and she seems to think he's pretty adorable, too.
Irene Dunne as Stephanie |
While John is talking with his aunt, he meets Countess Scharwenka (Ginger Rogers), a fiery Polish nightclub entertainer who has taken Paris by storm. Wanting to impress John, she tells him she can get his friend's band a job at her nightclub - assuming they're good - so, since Huck and the Indianians happen to be at Roberta's, he forces her to hear them play right then.
Huck and the Wabash Indianians perform Let's Begin |
To Countess Sharwenka's dismay, she discovers that John's friend the bandleader just so happens to be an old boyfriend of hers - and the one person in Paris who knows her true identity: not as a Polish Countess, but as Lizzie Gatz, a small town girl from Indiana.
Lizzie convinces Huck to keep her identity a secret in exchange for a gig for his band at the nightclub where she performs. (She manages to get it for him, too - even though her boss is the same nightclub owner that fired the band when they first arrived in Paris.)
Lizzie and Huck renew their friendship and reminisce about old times.
Then Lizzie, as Countess Scharwenka (Polish accent and moxie galore) performs I'll Be Hard to Handle, my favorite song of the film:
A wonderful dance number follows:
Meanwhile, John grows more and more interested in Stephanie, but he hasn't quite gotten over Sophie (played by gorgeous Claire Dodd), a girl who just recently dumped him because she felt he wasn't sophisticated enough for her. Huck thinks that Sophie is a self-involved snob and John is probably better off without her, anyway.
Things seem to be going swimmingly...and then Aunt Minnie suddenly passes away. Everyone knows Minnie intended to leave the shop to Stephanie (who, we find out, has secretly been the shop's head designer all along), but because she didn't leave a will, the shop goes to her next of kin, John. John has no interest in running the shop by himself, so he and Stephanie agree to a partnership. All the while their attraction continues to grow.
Unfortunately, Sophie learns about John's inheritance in a recently published newspaper article and decides she wants her old country bumpkin boyfriend after all, so she heads to Paris intent on winning him back.
What little plot that follows is mostly uninspired and contrived, with only the Rogers/Astaire song-and-dance scenes to save the film. Ginger Rogers looks positively gorgeous in every scene and she is hands-down my favorite part of the movie.
Irene Dunne, who is usually so smart and funny and striking on screen, is dreadfully boring in this film. Anyone would have been with the lackluster lines she was given.
I did enjoy listening to Dunne sing - she performed four solos in the film, all beautiful ballads, and three of them were written by genius composer Jerome Kern: Smoke Gets in Your Eyes, Yesterdays and Lovely to Look At.
Irene Dunne performing Smoke Gets in Your Eyes |
The song and dance numbers were definitely the best scenes of the movie, but another highlight for me was the fashion. There are a TON of glamorous dresses in this movie, so that was fun to watch, especially then-unknown Lucille Ball in a non-speaking role as one of the fashion models.
Overall, Roberta is a cute movie. Lots of laughs (courtesy of Rogers and Astaire), musical numbers and beautiful gowns kept me entertained, but the silly plot kept getting in the way.
Rogers and Astaire make it worth a watch, though!
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