Hi Diddle Diddle

1943 "His bride was EVERYTHING he thought she was...and an air-raid warden besides!"
Hi Diddle Diddle
6.6| 1h12m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 02 August 1943 Released
Producted By: Andrew L. Stone Productions
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

When the bride's mother is supposedly swindled out of her money by a spurned suitor, the groom's father orchestrates a scheme of his own to set things right. He is aided by a cabaret singer, while placating a jealous wife.

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Andrew L. Stone Productions

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jacobs-greenwood Andrew Stone produced, directed and wrote the story (which was adapted by Edmund Hartmann and Frederick Jackson) for this wartime screwball comedy featuring an Academy Award nominated Score by Phil Boutelje. Also notable is the appearance of Pola Negri in the cast; this was her first film in years and her last until her final role in The Moon-Spinners (1964). Adolphe Menjou, Martha Scott, Dennis O'Keefe, Billie Burke, Walter Kingsford, and Barton Hepburn play the other significant parts in the movie.The plot is pretty standard stuff for a screwball comedy: it relies on misunderstandings among some wealthy characters - like the always reliable ditz Burke - for its comic payoffs. Menjou plays his typical womanizer, even though he's married to Negri's character, an opera singer he'd charmed six months ago for her money. Paul Porcasi plays her impresario. Menjou's son Sonny (O'Keefe) is a chip off the old block, a sailor in the Navy with a girl in every port until he meets Martha Scott, who's playing a wealthy debutante that's Burke's daughter. O'Keefe's character insists that he's never been in love like this before, a line he uses several times with other women in the film's opening credits, which include cartoon character sequences, as does the film's final scene (of operatic composer Richard Wagner and his family at a picnic!).But as is often the case, Burke's character is really smarter than she looks or acts; she and Hepburn's character have schemed to test O'Keefe's love for her daughter Scott. Burke, a rich widow who socializes with a senator played by Kingsford, pretends to lose all her money to Hepburn, who's ostensibly interested in marrying Scott for himself, in order to see if O'Keefe still wants to marry her. Naturally, their love is stronger than such concerns but, with the prospect of having to support his would-be mother-in-law Burke, O'Keefe engages his "pretending to be wealthy" father Menjou, who's a somewhat impoverished kept man of Negri's, to solve this newly financial problem of his. Menjou's plan involves using a more powerful magnet at the 59 club's (owned by Georges Metaxa's character) crooked roulette table (operated by croupier Eddie Marr) to beat them at their own game. He gets assistance from a longtime associate who's currently the club's singer, June Havoc.There's another scam involving some phony gold mine stock (wasn't there any other type of enterprise that could be used in those days?) which inadvertently fools a real brokerage firm employee (Byron Foulger) and its owner (Richard Hageman). There's also a running joke whereby Lorraine Miller appears in almost every scene (walking her dog on the street, as a hatcheck girl, etc.), noticed by Menjou and eventually labeled a friend of this film's director by Burke. Several requisite false identity gags, who's married to whom etc., also transpire which, when combined with the aforementioned schemes, nearly prevent the newlyweds time from having any alone time. But thanks to the family's maid (Ellen Lowe), O'Keefe and Scott finally get some time to consummate their marriage before he has to ship off again.
csteidler Sailor Dennis O'Keefe has a two-day shore leave and the wedding is all planned out by bride Martha Scott and her family. Unfortunately, O'Keefe's ship comes in late and that delay is followed by the discovery that Scott's mother has been swindled out of her fortune....Can they manage to get hitched before O'Keefe is called back to his ship? O'Keefe and Scott are attractive and funny, and Adolph Menjou is outstanding as O'Keefe's father, a con man who means well but never quite hits it big. Menjou vows to help restore the lost fortune and sets about using his connections at the casino.A wonderful and unique supporting cast includes Billie Burke as Scott's mother, cheerfully goofy as always; June Havoc as a spirited song-and-dance girl who helps Menjou out; and Pola Negri as a temperamental opera singer who loves Wagner ("She half wildcat!" a casino employee exclaims—a clever nod to Negri's wacky 1921 picture The Wildcat.) The plot itself is just okay but much enhanced by memorable little bits that surprise and delight. One such moment features Burke and friends sitting around a nightclub table practicing doing double takes; another is the musical number in which Havoc duets with a movie of herself. Then there's the slinky babe who keeps popping up in different scenes for no apparent reason—until Burke finally fills us in: "She's a very particular friend of the director who's making this picture. He sticks her in every scene he can."It doesn't aim too high but it sure is lots of fun.
Terrell-4 Sonny Phyffe (Dennis O'Keefe), a sailor with a conquest in every port, is three hours late to his wedding to Janie Prescott (Martha Scott), whose mother is the very wealthy and scatterbrained Liza Prescott (Billie Burke). Liza harbors doubts about Sonny's sincerity. Sonny is anxious about the wedding because he only has two days ashore before he has to report back to his ship. But minutes before the wedding Mrs. Prescott confesses that she has lost her fortune, swindled out of it by a high society clot who is determined to wed Janie himself. But now that sly old scoundrel, Col. Hector Phyffe (Adolphe Menjou), who is Sonny's father, steps forward and says he'll put things right. All he needs is a few hours. The Colonel, however, is married to the opera diva Genya Smetana (Pola Negri). He hasn't a dime of his own. She keeps him on a short lease. He must do what he does best, come up with a series of improbable schemes and stratagems to replace Mrs. Prescott's fortune. All the while the clock is ticking. Will the Colonel somehow find a way to get back Liza Prescott's money? Will Liza with her ditzy behavior make things better or worse? Will Sonny and Janie work their way through this maze of mix-ups and into bed before Sonny has to leave? Will there at last be a consummation devoutly to be wished, especially by Sonny and Janie. If this sounds like screwball comedy, it tries hard to be and sometimes succeeds. Menjou keeps the wheels spinning. Burke's character may not be as flighty as Billie Burke. Pola Negri, a great silent star, at 49 is stunning. She could easily pass as Hedy Lamar's slightly older sister. June Havoc has a funny featured role and a couple of songs. What Hi Diddle Diddle really has going for it is a clever twist that is well disguised and two accomplished actors who were right at home with light comedy, Adolphe Menjou and Dennis O'Keefe. Menjou was never better than playing a man of the world who has seen all the tricks and mastered most of them himself. He moved from a major leading man in the silents (A Woman of Paris, 1923) to a master portrayer of amusing rogues, charlatans, fathers and lawyers. He was at his best as the shyster lawyer Billy Flynn in Roxie Hart, 1942. As an old man he still knew what he was doing. His portrayal of Mr. Pendergast, an irascible recluse in Pollyanna, 1960, is touching, amusing and believable. I doubt if there was ever a Hollywood leading man, other than Cary Grant, who was as good at light comedy as Dennis O'Keefe. He paid his dues in countless unbilled bits in the Thirties, moved up to second billings and then lead roles in the Forties and early Fifties, but was never able to establish himself in big A movies. He was a tall, handsome guy who could play puzzled bumpkins, tough G-men, doomed noir heroes and nice guys. If you have the time, watch him in these: As Jerry Manning in The Leopard Man, 1943; as Monty Brewster in Brewster's Millions, 1945; as Joe Sullivan in Raw Deal, 1948; as Sam Donovan in Cover Up, 1949; and as Danny Leggett in Woman on the Run, 1950.
pmcenea This movie presents serious problems for me. First, I couldn't stand the fact that an admitted felon, a swindler (Barton Hepburn), was wandering through the movie without anyone thinking to call the police. Not only did he swindle Billy Burke of everything, but then proceeds to disrupt everyone's life and PEOPLE LISTEN TO HIM!!! I also have no patience for Ms. Burke's as a ditz. She is capable of so much more.