The Affairs of Annabel
The Affairs of Annabel | |
---|---|
Directed by | Benjamin Stoloff |
Written by | Bert Granet (writer) Charles Hoffman (story) |
Produced by | |
Starring | Jack Oakie Lucille Ball |
Cinematography | Russell Metty |
Edited by | Jack Hively |
Music by | Roy Webb |
Distributed by | RKO Radio Pictures |
Release date | September 9, 1938 |
Running time | 68 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Affairs of Annabel is a 1938 comedy film directed by Benjamin Stoloff and starring Lucille Ball and Jack Oakie. Oakie plays Lannie Morgan, Wonder Pictures publicity man working with film star Annabel Allison (Ball), her first starring comedy role. It was followed by the sequel Annabel Takes a Tour the same year, also starring Oakie, Ball, and Donnelly.
Plot[]
Lannie (Jack Oakie) has Annabel (Lucille Ball) taken into prison in order to generate publicity before the release of her new movie. However, when Annabel is released a month later, she finds that nobody has noticed, and she has Lannie fired. But when he pays a struggling actress to pretend to be his sick mother, Annabel has Lannie rehired, and he immediately begins plotting his next stunt.
The head of Wonder Pictures informs Annabel that her film has been canceled, and that she is to star in a new film, The Maid and the Man. Lannie arranges to have her work as "Mary", a maid for the Fletchers, their teenage son Robert (Lee Van Atta), and inventor "Major" (Thurston Hall). While Robert becomes infatuated with Annabel, she is expected to cook and clean for the family, so she calls on Lannie to help. Meanwhile, the investors interested in one of Major's inventions, a rubber ring placed around a plate so that it will bounce rather than break when dropped, appear in the morning newspaper as robbers. They are in fact waiting for their own publicity to die down so that they can make a getaway.
Back at Wonder Pictures, The Maid and the Man has been scrapped, but when Lannie calls Annabel to tell her, she answers that she can't leave. Though first confused, he finds Annabel's police mug shot in the paper along with the robbers, and forms a plan to outfit fifty extras as policemen (plus a police sergeant and captain). As they march towards the house firing blanks, the robbers return fire with real bullets, and the extras scatter. Lannie sneaks into the house alone, but is captured.
When the real policemen arrive, the robbers try to make a break for it, using Lannie and Allison as shields. Instead, Annabel uses her martial arts training to throw one of the robbers to the ground, while Lannie bites the other.
Annabel returns to Wonder Pictures and is disappointed to find that The Maid and the Man has been replaced by The Diamond Smuggler, in which she is to play the lead. On her way out, Annabel picks up a gift which Lannie had arranged for her to receive, and is apprehended when the police open it to discover the precious jewels inside. Lannie watches on from the front of the new billboard for The Diamond Smuggler as Annabel is driven away screaming.
Cast[]
- Jack Oakie as Lanny Morgan
- Lucille Ball as Annabel Allison
- Ruth Donnelly as Josephine
- Bradley Page as Howard Webb
- Fritz Feld as Vladimir Dukov
- Thurston Hall as Major
- Elisabeth Risdon as Mrs. Margaret Fletcher
- Granville Bates as Jim Fletcher
- James Burke as Officer Muldoon
- Lee Van Atta as Robert Fletcher
- Anthony Warde as Bailey aka Rogers
- Leona Roberts as Mrs. Hurley
- Charles Coleman as The Butler, Perkins
- Brooks Benedict as Man in Webb's Office
- Stanley Blystone as Cop
- Maurice Cass as Dr. Rubnick
- Claire Du Brey as Convict
- Mildred Gover as Scarlet, the Maid
- Kane Richmond as Detective
- Madame Sul-Te-Wan as Benzedrina, a Convict
- John Sutton as Man at newsstand
References[]
This article does not cite any sources. (September 2014) |
External links[]
- English-language films
- 1938 films
- American black-and-white films
- 1938 comedy films
- Films directed by Benjamin Stoloff
- American comedy films
- American films
- Films about actors
- RKO Pictures films
- Films about filmmaking