Evergreen

1934
6.6| 1h34m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 31 December 1934 Released
Producted By: Gaumont-British Picture Corporation
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Harriet Green, a beloved and radiant music hall star of the Edwardian era mysteriously disappears on the eve of her wedding. Years later she reappears on the stage as young looking and beautiful as ever.

Genre

Comedy, Music, Romance

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Evergreen (1934) is now streaming with subscription on MGM+

Director

Victor Saville

Production Companies

Gaumont-British Picture Corporation

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Evergreen Audience Reviews

TrueJoshNight Truly Dreadful Film
VividSimon Simply Perfect
Sexyloutak Absolutely the worst movie.
Kaydan Christian A terrific literary drama and character piece that shows how the process of creating art can be seen differently by those doing it and those looking at it from the outside.
arfdawg-1 Harriet Green, a beloved and radiant music hall star of the Edwardian era, has a guilty secret: She has a baby daughter, born out of wedlock.Harriet leaves her public and flees to South Africa to raise her daughter quietly. The years pass, and now her daughter, Harriet Hawkes, returns to London as a young show-biz hopeful. Tommy, a wily publicity man, knowing that young Harriet is a dead ringer for her famous mother, convinces a theater producer to star her in a new revue as none other than the original Harriet Green, miraculously untouched by old age. The ruse works too well: Now the public believes Harriet is a well- preserved 60-year-old and Tommy is her son. The deception is more than merely inconvenient, because now Harriet and Tommy have secretly fallen in love.Leave it to the Brits to come up with a plot like this. It's entertaining.
kidboots "Ever Green" (the musical play) was a triumph for Jessie Matthews and opened at the Adelphi Theatre on the West End in December, 1930 for a lengthy seven month run. Fortunately Jessie was able to repeat her role in the film version four years later but unfortunately they were not able to get Fred Astaire, who had been appearing on the London stage in "The Gay Divorce and had wisely been snapped up by RKO. Victor Saville, who had been the first director to bring out Jessie's film potential in "The Good Companions" (1933), had been desperately hoping to hire Astaire to star opposite her. What an amazing dancing team they would have been, but he had to make do with boring Barry MacKay who could neither sing nor dance. Even though Jessie was called the "Dancing Divinity", her film experience and different directors had left her with an inferiority complex about her looks and her cinema appeal. Two people who joined her on "Evergreen" actually gave Jessie the confidence to believe she could become a star - Glen MacWilliams, a cinematographer who helped to show her how to accentuate her very cute features to advantage and Buddy Bradley, the American choreographer who bought something extra to her dances and made them extremely memorable.In most of Jessie Matthews films she was always pretending to be someone she is not - similar to the Astaire/ Rogers films. Harriet Green is a beloved music hall entertainer who delights fans with her renditions of "Daddy Wouldn't Buy Me a Bow Wow" and "I Wouldn't Leave My Little Wooden Hut for You", but at the end of her performance she astonishes fans with the news that she is retiring to marry a Nobleman. Her happiness is destroyed when her long thought dead lover appears and demands "hush money". She disappears - but leaves her little daughter in a maid's care.Jump to 1934 and Harriet Green (Jnr) is an out of work chorus girl who catches the eye of Leslie Benn (Sonnie Hale) who knew her mother. His leading lady walks out in a huff and he comes up with the "stunt" of passing Harriet off as her own mother. When she sings one of her mother's favourite songs, the publicity team go into action. With the help of a gray wig and some glasses she actually pulls it off but it means she has to hide her own considerable talent and it frustrates her. Hale leads a rehearsal of the infectious "Tinkle, Tinkle, Tinkle". "When You've Got a Little Springtime in Your Heart" is given quite a bizarre treatment (one of the many times the song is sung) as a huge hourglass is sent spinning through the years as Harriet leads a riotous charleston, chorus girls are turned into bombs and bullets on a 1914 assembly line, until the hour glass is smashed in 1904 and Harriet sings "Daddy Wouldn't Buy Me a Bow Wow". The Marquis of Staines suddenly makes his appearance and in his befuddled state comes to the conclusion that Tommy (Barry MacKay) is really Harriet's son. In one of the best lines in the film Tommy says to the audience "I've been in love with her for weeks - but I have to go around calling her "Mummy". Staines proposes to Harriet and Tommy urges her to accept - for publicity. She accepts in anger but the duet "Dear, Dear" which she and Tommy sing shows the coolness melting with a long kiss (it also shows that Barry MacKay was no singer). Staines suggests that Tommy move in with his "mother" to look after her. Harriet does a sublimely beautiful dance to "Dancing on the Ceiling" - apparently Jessie improvised that dance and showed why she was called the "Dancing Divinity".By opening night Harriet is determined to make it on her own and not as her own mother - so in a spirited tap dance to "Over My Shoulder" - the jig was up (as they say in America). In court - for defrauding the public, Harriet Green proves she can stand on her own as a beautiful singer and the stage is set for a sparkling finale, with a medley of "Tinkle, Tinkle, Tinkle", "Over My Shoulder" and "When You've Got a Little Springtime in Your Heart". This is just the most gorgeous musical with Jessie Matthews at her most beautiful best. Also of note is Betty Balfour as the dizzy countess, she was one of the early stars of the British stage and films.Highly, Highly Recommended.
drednm Wonderful 30s British musical based on a show by Rodgers and Hart that never played on Broadway.Jessie Matthews stars as Harriet Green, the toast of the London stage in the early 1900s when she suddenly retires and disappears in South Africa because she has an illegitimate child by a man who is blackmailing her. 30 years later a young actress is making the rounds and is discovered because she is a dead ringer for old Harriet. Of course she is the daughter.But a desperate producer (Sonnie Hale) and a publicity man (Barry McKay) come up with a plan to foist the girl off as the original, ageless Harriet (evergreen). She is a sensation. But her success causes all sorts or problems when the blackmailer returns and when McKay falls in love with her (after he has been proclaimed to be her son!).Fanciful plot is far-fetched, but the cast is excellent in this terrific musical by two American greats. And Jessie Matthews is superb. She was a major musical comedy star of the British stage and screen from the 20s through WW II. And she is incandescent here in her best film.This is maybe the most Hollywood-looking musical the Brits produced in the 1930s. Matthews has one great production number when as old Harriet she does a succession of dance numbers, each one going back ten years to the 1890s. In between each number she flips a giant hour glass to denote the passage of time.Matthews was a great dancer and singer and in EVERGREEN she was never better. She has another great number in "Dancing on the Ceiling" in which she shows her famous high kicks and arched back moves. Hale (her husband) and McKay are also good. Betty Balfour as Maudie has an hysterical bit when she does an aria from "Rigoletto." My VHS copy has bad sound but it's a terrific old film and a chance to see the legendary Jessie Matthews in her best role.
stephen-63 I have just seen a pristine print of this film on a large cinema screen and it was a real delight. For English readers, Jesse Matthews is best known as a radio soap star, but in this film she shows she was first a dancer, then a comedienne (her timing is excellent) and then a singer. The radio work came later. Her dancing is superb. Recall the dancing days and looks of Una Stubbs then add the radiant beauty of a young Joan Collins... For American readers, there is a brief on screen appearance by the choreographer, unable to obtain credit for his work in the Busby-Berkeley movies for which he did so much. The big dance numbers are superb. The story somehow works and there is an energy and sense of fun which does much to entertain. No bad language. No nudity- but Matthews dancing is quite sensuous enough. Lovely family film. Try to see it if the new print appears near you. And surely there must be a DVD release soon... (perhaps from the BFI).