Author and newspaper columnist Damon Runyon wrote several stories about the rougher citizens of New York. Gangsters, gamblers, chorus girls, and apple sellers were the characters who came to life in his tales. Some of these short stories attracted Hollywood’s attention, although the movie adaptations sometimes bore little resemblance to the original works and often featured changed titles.
“Bloodhounds of Broadway” was a short story by Runyon. It was made into a movie of the same name in 1952. Mitzi Gaynor is the only big name in the movie, but most of the other roles are played by recognizable character actors. It’s a 20th Century Fox musical directed by Harmon Jones.
This is a charming story about a simple country girl who meets a big city crook. He intends to civilize her, but she ends up changing him with her homespun honesty and sincerity.
Country Girl Meets City Slicker
Numbers Foster (Scott Brady) is a New York bookie with an exceptional ability to do mathematical equations in his head and who is a key player with the city’s major rackets. He’s in trouble when the film starts, since he and his crooked confederates are being roped into a crime investigation. He and his fellow gangsters hide out in Cuba while his girl, Yvonne Dugan (Marguerite Chapman), is called to the stand. She follows his instructions of what to say in court, while Numbers listens in on the radio. Once they’re in the clear, Numbers heads back to New York with his right-hand man, hypochondriac Poorly Sammis (Wally Vernon), as his driver.While Numbers is asleep, Poorly takes a wrong turn, and they end up in rural Georgia, out of gas. They head out on foot to find some fuel and come across a simple funeral, where country girl Emily Ann Stackerlee (Gaynor) is singing a beautiful hymn in memory of her grandfather. Despite the hostility of her hillbilly suitor, Crockett Pace (Timothy Carey), Emily Ann welcomes the two strangers, helping them find gas and inviting them to stay for lunch. Their meal is interrupted when Crockett and his brothers show up and start a fight. Numbers, Poorly, Emily Ann, and two huge bloodhounds escape by car, and Numbers decides to take the girl to New York with them, since he feels responsible for her.
A Hollywood Musical
This movie’s title refers to Emily Ann’s huge, comical dogs and the fact that they go to New York City. “Broadway” of the title refers to the street, not the musical theater genre. This is, however, a musical movie, since it includes multiple musical numbers by several different pairs of songwriters. All of the musical numbers are performed in the context of the story, so they don’t stick out from the plot. None of the songs are extremely memorable, but they serve their purpose, which is mainly to showcase Mitzi Gaynor’s singing and dancing. Since leading man Scott Brady was not a musical performer, Miss Gaynor is joined by 52nd Tessie and Curtaintime Charlie (Richard Allan), a minor role basically just included for his dancing, in one main number.The musical number I liked the best was “Cindy,” an old tune, which Emily Ann performs with a little neighbor girl at her cabin with accompaniment from a crank phonograph. Her friend is 9-year-old Little Elida (Sharon Baird), an adorable character you only see in this scenario. The two girls dance together at first, but Elida eventually breaks out into an amazingly intricate tap dance when the record speeds up, little Sharon has some impressive dancing skills! I wish they had made Elida Emily Ann’s little sister instead of just a friend, since her feisty personality and amazing tap dancing would have been enjoyable throughout the rest of the film. People who don’t necessarily love musicals can enjoy movie musicals like this, because they keep the singing and dancing to a minimum. At the same time, classic musical fans will enjoy this showcase for young Mitzi Gaynor, one of the last living stars from the Golden Age of Hollywood.
A Good Choice
Thankfully, old movies are now easier to watch than ever before. That’s about one of the only things that are better about the 2020s than previous decades, so make the most of the resources for classic film viewing which are available! Almost any movie can now be found on DVD and occasionally Blu-ray from Amazon and sometimes Barnes & Noble. “Bloodhounds of Broadway” is also available for streaming to rent or purchase on Amazon Prime Video. If all else fails, you can find a copy of almost any old movie for free on ok.ru, a Russian social media site, although you may have to search for one without subtitles or an overdubbed foreign language.This movie is the lighter yet more serious alternative to “Guys and Dolls.” It comes from a story by the same author, yet there are fewer songs, fewer innuendos, and more heartwarming moments. It’s a nice blend of a gangster story with a musical about a country girl who goes to the big city. This is a fun movie that many people with different tastes in movies can enjoy together.