Stowaway

1936 "She sings and speaks Chinese!"
7.1| 1h27m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 25 December 1936 Released
Producted By: 20th Century Fox
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Chin-Ching gets lost in Shanghai and is befriended by American playboy Tommy Randall. She falls asleep in his car which winds up on a ship headed for America. Susan Parker, also on the ship, marries Randall to give Chin-Ching a family.

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Director

William A. Seiter

Production Companies

20th Century Fox

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Stowaway Audience Reviews

Plustown A lot of perfectly good film show their cards early, establish a unique premise and let the audience explore a topic at a leisurely pace, without much in terms of surprise. this film is not one of those films.
Erica Derrick By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
Portia Hilton Blistering performances.
Tymon Sutton The acting is good, and the firecracker script has some excellent ideas.
weezeralfalfa In a recent tribute to Shirley Temple by TCM, upon her recent death, this was my favorite of 4 pre-'39 films, including "Heidi". It was also the only one of the 4 I didn't remember seeing in the distant past. I enjoyed it more than the others for several reasons. It has the zaniest story, which some reviewers consider a negative, but I find amusing. Shirley is mostly called by her pet Chinese name Ching-Ching, this story supposedly taking place in several parts of China, or on a ship. Unlike many of her films, there is no real sourpuss(adult or child) that Shirley has to deal with much of the time. The cute and charismatic Alice Faye is often present(as Susan). She gets to sing a couple of Revel-Gordon songs without Shirley.. Then, Shirley is at her most charismatic age as a child star, in my opinion. Non-musical, but personable, Robert Young was borrowed from MGM to serve as the male lead: notorious playboy Tommy Randall. He and Shirley seemed to get along great, the scripted Shirley having a closer relationship with him than with Alice(true in most S.T. films I've seen) Although rotund Eugene Palette is billed high on the player's list, in fact, he had only a small, inconsequential, role. Helen Westley, as the mother of Young's rival(Richard) for the affections of Alice, plays her usual domineering matron role. Arthur Treacher is present at times, in his usual stiff British valet role.The story begins in the apparently mythical Chinese city of Sanchow, situated upstream from Soochow, on the Yangtze. Shirley's foster parent, a missionary, declares that he and Shirley will remain in Sanchow, despite the report that a large bandit army is about to descend on the city. However, Shirley's Chinese friend, sun lo, arranged for a friend, Chang, to take her by sampan, down the Yangtze, to stay with his brother in Shanghai. But upon arrival, Chang steals Shirley's purse so he can participate in a gambling game, and disappears. So, with her Pekinese: Mr. Woo, she wanders around the wharf area, until she spies Young, trying to communicate with a shopkeeper about a purchase, Shirley translates his want and saves him some money. So, they become acquainted, and Shirley gets a ride in his open car, he stopping to visit a friend. While she waits in the car, a shower passes, causing her to transfer to the trunk, which she closes and falls asleep. Soon, the car is loaded onto a ship for Hong Kong and beyond. Thus, she is an accidental stowaway, eventually hiding in the room occupied by Alice and her mother-in-law-to-be. This eventually leads to the meeting of Alice and 'Uncle Tommy'(Young), relating to Shirley. Despite Alice being engaged to another man(Richard Hope),she responds somewhat to Young's romantic overtures, and they dance lightly while she sings the love song "Goodnight My Love", previously sung by Shirley as she is drifting off to sleep.. Richard boards the ship at Hong Kong, and friction between the two men begins when Hope discovers the dalliance with his fiancé, which the duo ascribe to their common interest in the welfare of Shirley.Later, Alice decides to cancel her planned wedding when she discovers what a mama's boy her fiancé is, and that mama plans to live with them. Meanwhile, Young gets news that Shirley's missionary father was killed in the bandit raid. He wants to adopt Shirley to prevent her being sent to a Shanghai orphanage. But, as a bachelor, Young can't legally qualify. Thus, he finally arm-twists Alice into marrying him, so they can adopt Shirley, with the understanding that Alice can then go to Reno for a divorce, if she doesn't want to stay married to the wealthy, but playboy, Young character. Shirley is very happy at this news, as Young and Alice seem like her fantasy new parents.Well, Alice decides to go through with the divorce in Reno, with her old boyfriend, Hope, waiting in the wings, promising to dump his mother, if Alice will take him back. But the judge(played by Edward Bromberg), after taking a look at the duo of Young and Shirley, decides to have a private talk with Shirley, who obviously tells him she doesn't want her new parents to split. The judge has Shirley take the stand, after coaching her what to say in response to his questions. However, at one point, she says 'holy macaroni' for 'holy matrimony', thus clearly exposing her act. Nonetheless, the judge rules against the grounds for divorce, and the threesome have a happy Christmas, with Shirley singing "That's What I Want for Christmas": quite a catchy tune, with its depression-era appropriate lyrics, not always clearly enunciated by Shirley. The gifted lyricist Irving Caesar Irving did the lyrics to this, as well as Shirley's signature song "Animal Crackers in My Soup" While the ship is docked in Hong Kong, Shirley has a stage performance, in which the audience members are invited to go on stage and give a performance. She follows oriental Sammee Tong's imitation of Bing Crosby's singing style, with "You Gotta S-M-I-L-E to be H-A-double P-Y". She does stage impressions of Al Jolson and Eddie Cantor, then danced with a dummy, supposedly representing Fred Astaire.
bkoganbing 1936 was a breakthrough year for Alice Faye for two reasons. First this was when stopped being 20th Century Fox's platinum blond answer to MGM's Jean Harlow. But Darryl Zanuck did her a big favor when he hired the songwriting team of Mack Gordon and Harry Revel away from Paramount and for the next five years they were practically Alice Faye's personal composers. Nearly all the succeeding films she did had a Gordon-Revel song in it and after Mack and Harry split up, Gordon continued to write with Harry Warren as a partner for 20th Century Fox. Gordon in fact put more words in Alice Faye's mouth than any other lyricist.Gordon and Revel wrote a couple of songs for this Shirley Temple film Stowaway where she unites Alice Faye and Robert Young to become her new parents. The setting is China though they never got anywhere near the real Kuomintang China for this film. Shirley's an orphan who's being raised by some missionaries in place of her parents who were also missionaries. When bandits are threatening the mission, Shirley's sent to Shanghai. But Willie Fung to whom she's entrusted skips out on her and leaves her and her Pekinese dog stranded.But our little moppet is resourceful and she charms playboy Robert Young and later Alice Faye who's engaged to both Allan Lane and his mother Helen Westley. That's right Lane and Westley are definitely a package deal. It's a Shirley Temple film so any of you who are fans of her's know exactly how things go here.Gordon and Revel wrote for Stowaway my favorite ballad of their's and one of the best movie songs ever done, Goodnight My Love. Alice even got to record this one. First Shirley sings it and then Alice does it as an adult obbligato with adult lyrics. It was one of Alice Faye's best loved movie songs though the real hit record was done by the Benny Goodman Orchestra and a new vocalist he had hired, one Ella Fitzgerald. You can't go wrong with either recording.Helen Westley also does well as the prospective mother-in-law from hell and my favorite in the supporting cast is J. Edward Bromberg who after Shirley testifies at a divorce hearing, refuses to grant a divorce for Young and Faye. It's one of Shirley Temple and Alice Faye's best films and even today you will love how orphan Shirley finds a family that she has to put together.
Snow4849 "Sparkle, Shirley, sparkle!" Gertrude Temple cried between takes whenever her little daughter's energy flailed. As Ching-Ching, an American girl living in China, Shirley sparkles, all right; she just never dazzles. Little Ching-Ching is full of happy grins and spouts plenty of wise Chinese proverbs, but not once does she break into one of the delightful song-and-dance routines that make Shirley's other films so memorable. She only dances very briefly in this movie, and it is a great disappointment to fans who want to see the tapping that made her such a world famous star.Another disappointment is the absence of memorable music. Shirley's song "You've Gotta Smile to be Happy" showcases her impressive talent for mimickry -- she channels Eddie Cantor and Ginger Rogers, among others -- but her other two songs, "Goodnight My Love" and "That's What I Want for Christmas," completely lack the snap and fun of catchy classics like "On the Good Ship Lollipop" (Bright Eyes), "Animal Crackers in My Soup" (Curly Top), "At the Codfish Ball" (Captain January), "Oh My Goodness" (Poor Little Rich Girl), or "The Old Kent Road" (The Little Princess).What sparkle Shirley does achieve is snuffed by the dreary adult performances. Ching-Ching's rural guardians, the Kruikshanks, and her pal Sun Lo are almost laughable. Alice Faye's character, Susan Parker, is clearly in love with Ching-Ching, but that's about the only emotion she seems to have. Susan has been harboring doubts about her engagement to the very contrived, cardboard character Richard Hope -- largely because of Richard's sickly enmeshment with his mother, played to meddlesome perfection by Helen Westley -- when she begins to feel a budding romance for Ching-Ching's rich, handsome guardian, Thomas Randall. Her choice between the two men is supposed to seem dramatic and difficult, but instead Susan only comes off as indecisive and wishy-washy. In another Shirley film, "Poor Little Rich Girl," Alice Faye displays a natural chemistry with her on screen husband Jack Haley, but in "Stowaway," Susan's relationships with both are Richard and Thomas are severely lacking, and together these three adults manage to display all the passion of a dentist office. Arthur Treacher does add some charming and unexpected wit in his small role as Thomas's butler, but if you want to see the full extent of Temple and Treacher's talents, watch them together in "The Little Princess," but not "Stowaway."
buppy Shirley Temple, Robert Young, and Alice Faye star in this wonderful family film. Shirley Temple plays Barbara Stewart aka Ching-Ching, a lovable child who befriends Tommy Randall (Robert Young) in China. Both end up on a ship going to the United States. There they both meet Susan Parker (Alice Faye, in a brilliant performance). If you like Shirley Temple films and haven't seen this one you definitely should. Shirley was always great in her films and this one is no exception.