![]() ![]() ![]() A choice line: “Bridal suites are never very idle!” There’s more eyebrow waggling here than in many later Groucho Marx movies. There’s a musical number called “Honeymoon Hotel”.“Send a new boy and girl out right away and make sure they aren’t in love with each other. On losing a pair of performers in a traveling show.One of the film’s gold diggers (unfortunately, she missed being in that film by a few months) is almost caught by her fiance reading from a magazine called “Naughty Stories”.A police officer, popping in on a rehearsal: “Seeing all these girls gives me a lot of ideas.”.James Cagney, quickly switching topics from the theater to women: “Never mind the outline… I think I got a new one!”.Blondell accidentally puts her stockings on the wrong legs at one point.On a director learning how to mimic a cat’s movements: “I’ve done everything but sleep with him!” Cagney’s response: “Then sleep with him!”.During a rather cutesy number about cats dancing and singing under the moon, he protests the subsequent arrival of their offspring: “We can’t have kittens in 39 cities!” He also turns out to be a mewling idiot who’s also a hypocrite: “I’m showing Miss Rich what you can’t do in Kalamazoo!” The film has Hugh Herbert as the theatrical production company’s censor, and the movie takes great glee in mocking his inanity.Joan Blondell to a romantic rival: “I know Miss Bit– I mean, Miss Rich.”.It’s a musical! There’s singing, dancing, and legs, legs, LEGS!.Jeanette is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California. Her family does not believe she took her own life. Although many believe she committed suicide her death may have been accidental. On AugJeanette died after ingesting ammonia. Sadly she did not get to enjoy her new life for very long. She retired from acting and married producer and liquor salesman Bert E. Her final film was the comedy Million Dollar Baby. After a few more small roles her career stalled. ![]() Jeanette tried to make a comeback with the 1934 drama St. She moved to New York city and starred in several Broadway shows. By 1931 she was tired of playing ingénues and decided to take a break from making movies. Jeanette got the chance to show off her soprano voice in films like King Of Jazz and Party Girl. She also had a love affairs with producer Paul Bern, song writer Walter O'Keefe, and actor Gilbert Roland. Jeanette married a salesman named Harry Rosenbloom but they divorced in 1929. After her parents divorced Jeanette's mother Inga and sisters Irene and Myrtle came to live with her in California. In 1928 she appeared in Annapolis, Love Over Night, and Hold 'Em Yale. Demille offered her a contract and she quickly became one of Hollywood busiest starlets. She made her acting debut in the 1927 film Uncle Tom's Cabin. Jeanette moved to Oregon and got a job playing the organ. At age sixteen she had a starring role in the operetta Treasure Hunters. She loved to sing and she studied music at the Ellison and White Conservatory. Her father Maurice was a successful violinist who moved their family to Canada when Jeanette was a child. Jeanette Loff was born Janette Lov in Orofino, Idaho, on October 9, 1906. ![]()
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