Florence Denny is Tommy Nelson's girlfriend and secretary at a clothing manufacturer during the Great Depression. In order to boost sales they have been using professional female entertainers to keep their clients very happy, but the clients are getting bored of them. Tommy convinces management to replace the professionals with "volunteers" from the pool of stenographers. Inevitably some clients expectations are greater than their "dates", boyfriends become unhappy, and the "voluntary" duty becomes less so over time. At first, Tommy prevents Florence from being a volunteer, but eventually the prospect of a bonus becomes too great and he encourages her to volunteer. Afterwards, Tommy considers Florence a loose woman.
Loretta Young
Florence 'Flo' Denny
Winnie Lightner
Maizee
Lyle Talbot
Daniel 'Danny' Drew
Regis Toomey
Tommy Nelson
Hugh Herbert
Luther Haines
Ferdinand Gottschalk
Sol Glass
Suzanne Kilborn
Birdie Reynolds
Helen Ware
Mrs. Haines
Harold Waldridge
Glass' Office Boy
Charles Lane
Mr. Bernstein (uncredited)
Dennis O'Keefe
Cabaret Patron (uncredited)
Jed Prouty
Mr. Goran (uncredited)
Donna Mae Roberts
Woman Slapping Luther (uncredited)
Barbara Rogers
Model (uncredited)
Renee Whitney
Customer Girl with Tommy and Birdie (uncredited)
Pat Wing
Model (uncredited)
Toby Wing
Model (uncredited)
Director
George Amy
Director
Busby Berkeley
Screenplay
Rian James
Screenplay
Don Mullaly
Story
John Francis Larkin
April 12, 2018
7
An excellent pre-code era film that illustrates the pressure for women to use their sex to help their boss, but becoming a "bad woman" by doing so. In addition, it illustrates that men are expected to be promiscuous while women are expected to be virgins.
The greatest shortcoming of the film is imposed of the norms of the period: Loretta, like every woman, has to forgive any outrageous and even violent behaviour by a sexually aggressive male and to assume that it is really her fault.
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00