Mr. Music (1950) Poster

(1950)

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5/10
A little too sophisticated for Bing
bkoganbing8 March 2004
When this film first came out in 1950 it was like Babe Ruth hitting a double. The score by Burke-Van Heusen is serviceable for Crosby, a couple of nice numbers. In fact the best number in the movie is And You'll Be Home, sung at a college assembly by Bing who is later joined by the whole ensemble. Unfortunately it occurs in the first 20 minutes of the movie so then it's downhill.

Bing plays a golf loving composer who's lost his muse and would rather spend more time on the links and at the track then working. His producer, Charles Coburn, hires Nancy Olson who is a graduating student from Bing's alma mater as a secretary to keep Bing's nose to the grind- stone. That has complications for Bing's steady, Ruth Hussey and Olson's inamorata, Robert Stack. Suffice it to say that everyone winds up with someone in the end.

It's a show business story, but not one like those Judy Garland-Mickey Rooney let's put on a show. We got some sophisticated folks in this story, not the usual kind who Bing hangs around with in the normal course of his films. A whole lot of the film action takes place in Bing's Park Avenue penthouse and Crosby looks a little lost there. He has some funny moments with Ida Moore, Tom Ewell, and Richard Haydn.

Of course a show is the highlight of the film and one awkward moment comes when Charles Coburn is amazed at some of the show business types Bing's obtained the services for a preview of his new Broadway show. At one point Coburn remarks to Crosby, "there's Dorothy Kirsten of the Metropolitan Opera" like he doesn't know who she is. But the audience probably doesn't. Still it looks so phony when the next performer they run into is Groucho Marx. No one thought of giving Coburn a line like "there's Groucho Marx of the Marx Brothers."

Speaking of Groucho he and Crosby sing a duet of Life Is So Peculiar which Bing had sang earlier in the movie with Peggy Lee. The film should be seen for both versions of this number also.

If you love Bing as I do or if you want to see him sing with Groucho Marx and Peggy Lee by all means see this film.
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6/10
A bit better than the later Gable picture....
planktonrules17 February 2018
Paul Merrick (Bing Crosby) is a composer whose best years seem behind him. Since his last big Broadway success, he's done everything but compose more music and his producer (Charles Coburn) is getting tired of waiting. In desperation, he hires a young lady (Nancy Olson) to be his secretary and task master! The arrangement works marvelously...but in the process she finds herself falling for Merrick.

"Mr. Music" was remade at the end of the decade and had Clark Gable falling for a significantly younger Carol Baker. This film was pleasant but a letdown for Gable...and a lot of it was the lack of chemistry between them and it just seemed difficult to see the young lady falling for him. In "Mr. Music", although there also is the age difference, Bing Crosby is so charming that the romance, though a bit forced, does work better. It also helped having a few nice cameos--Peggy Lee and Groucho in particular. Overall, a pleasant little film...nothing super special but a nice time-passer.
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5/10
If it wasn't for the cute old lady, I'd have quit this half way through....
mark.waltz14 July 2012
Warning: Spoilers
If you were around in the 1980's, you'll remember a sweet, cute little old lady named Loretta Tupper who was best known for the Fruit of the Loom commercials and jumping into the air after buying a car and shouting, "Whoopdie doo for my Subaru!". She was so cute that you just wanted to jump into the TV screen and hug her. Well, after seeing the Bing Crosby musical "Mr. Music", I wanted to do the same thing for Ida Moore, the cute-as-a-button senior who played the aunt of Nancy Olson. Seeing her made me wonder if Tupper could have been her daughter. But I digress.....

This is the second of three movie versions of the play "Accent on Youth", first filmed in 1935 with Herbert Marshall and Sylvia Sidney, and basically a decent adaption of a dated play. Here, Bing Crosby is playing a Broadway composer more content with playing golf than writing songs for Broadway producer Charles Coburn's next show. Coburn hires Olson to be Crosby's secretary, basically handle all his finances and give him money as long as he's writing songs. Crosby and Olson have so little chemistry that you just know the writers of this film are going to have them falling in love even though he's already involved with sophisticated Ruth Hussey and she's the apple of college jock Robert Stack's eye. The script gets on the wrong foot when it reveals that the 46 year old Crosby wrote the fight song for his college only 14 years before. Was he on the G.I. bill? No mention of that....

Even more embarrassing is the way Crosby performs "And You'll Be Home", a sweet song which suddenly gets the entire student body at his alma mater singing along without sheet music or a bouncing ball on a screen behind him. If Frank Sinatra was considered old hat by 1950, certainly Bing was even more so. Practically every actor over 40 at this time got to romance a much younger woman on screen; Only Gloria Swanson (in "Sunset Boulevard") did the opposite. It is about at the time where Olson and Crosby beginning their own romance that the lovable Ida Moore comes on screen, and from there, every moment of the film is hers. Fortunately, there are a few moments for other singers and various guests; Peggy Lee, the Merry Macs, Marge and Gower Champion, opera star Dorothy Kirsten and even Groucho Marxx come in as Crosby and Coburn continue to try to get their show on Broadway. Richard Haydn (Max in "The Sound of Music") has a small role as a wealthy pal of Moore's, and actually directed the film. Musicals of the late 40's and '50's are a mixed bag, and unfortunately, this is one of the thinner examples of dated humor that audiences would soon get for free on a box in their own living room. "Life is So Peculiar" is a good song but nothing remarkable.

The third version of "Accent on Youth" is a better version called "Teacher's Pet" which starred the more believable team of Clark Gable and Doris Day. Que Serra Serra....
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7/10
Very cute Bing Crosby satire
HotToastyRag19 November 2018
If you love Bing Crosby, add Mr. Music to your must-see list. In this comedy, he plays a songwriter who prefers to spend his time on the golf course instead of by the piano. His producer and faithful friend, Charles Coburn, makes an arrangement with uptight secretary, Nancy Olson, in order to force Bing back to work. He hires Nancy as Bing's personal jailer, and gives her Bing's fifteen thousand dollar salary and permission to do anything necessary to keep him working.

In Sunset Boulevard, I thought Nancy Olson was plain and slightly irritating, but in this movie, it totally works. She's supposed to be plain and irritating! Bing is charming and a bit of a scoundrel, but it's clear he means well, and Charles Coburn as funny and flustered as he needs to be. Bing is particularly adorable in this movie, since he gets to make fun of himself. And, in pursuit of Nancy, he even does pull-ups to compete with her athletic suitor, Robert Stack!
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Mr. Crosby
jarrodmcdonald-14 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
MR. MUSIC is a charming musical that Paramount released in 1950. Bing Crosby is at the peak of his creative powers as a vocalist and movie star. Plus it helps that he has been paired with Nancy Olson who always makes a fine leading lady.

The rest of the cast is quite dandy. We have Charles Coburn in a supporting role, and Robert Stack, too. Character actress Ida Moore, who plays Aunt Amy, is so cute she nearly walks off with the entire picture. And don't forget appearances by Dorothy Kirsten, Peggy Lee and Groucho Marx. It's a winner all around.

According to Variety, this film was one of the top box office hits of 1951. That means if released in 1950, it must have had staying power and played in theaters for quite awhile.
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