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My Sister Eileen
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Rosalind Russell plays aspiring Ohio journalist Ruth Sherwood, who heads for New York to seek her fortune, accompanied by her sister, Eileen (Janet Blair), an aspiring actress. The girls take a basement apartment in Greenwich Village, which becomes a gathering place for several oddball characters, including a football jock (Gordon Jones), his silly wife (Miss Jeff Donnell) and an eternally drunken fortuneteller (June Havoc). Ruth tries to sell her writing, but is advised by a friendly magazine editor (Brian Aherne) that she'll never succeed unless she writes from her own experiences. Meanwhile, Eileen is continually getting in trouble due to her ingenuous attractiveness. Ruth secures an assignment to interview several visiting Portuguese sailors, who follow her to her apartment, are immediately entranced by Eileen, and break up the joint with an impromptu conga line. Everyone ends up in jail, and it looks as though Ruth is going to have to leave New York without achieving success. But when Ruth begins writing about her life with her sister Eileen, she becomes a success -- and wins the love of the magazine editor in the bargain. My Sister Eileen was based on a series of autobiographical articles by real-life writer Ruth McKenney, who with Joseph Fields and Jerome Chodhorov adapted these stories into a Broadway play. The play was later musicalized for the stage as Wonderful Town (again with Rosalind Russell), while the film version was itself adapted into a separate movie musical in 1955. There was also a brief 1960 TV series, starring Elaine Stritch and Shirley Bonne. As an added fillip, the 1942 My Sister Eileen includes a fleeting guest appearance by The Three Stooges! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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HairyLimeHairyLime My Sister Eileen
by HairyLime in HairyLime Blog
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"Caught this one on TCM last night. Rather silly stage adaptation (you can even pick out where the curtains drop on act one and two). A lot of the jokes are rather dated, which is probably why this one doesn't show up on television all that often. Rosalind Russell plays her usual 'smart alec street smart dame' role that she did so well, and has to fend off numerous oddball characters interested in her naive pretty younger sister while trying to make it as a writer in New York. I lost interest in the third act, but my wife stuck with it and seemed to find the ending satisfactory (even with a cameo by the Three Stooges) and in her words 'very cute'. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
My Sister Eileen is admittedly silly and light, but it's that rare farce that is not only charming but downright lovable. The Jerome Chodorov-Joseph Fields screenplay, adapted from their smash-hit Broadway play, is marvelously structured, one of the primary requirements for a truly successful farce. It also boasts a good deal of laughs, both in terms of laugh lines and situational gags -- and we're talking laughs here, not just chuckles and smiles (although there are plenty of those as well). Sophisticated wit? Well, no, not exactly, but with so many people slamming in and out of doors in the Greenwich Village apartment that is the film's main setting, who has time for that? Besides, Rosalind Russell is on hand to guide visitors through the various goings-on in Eileen, and who could ask for more than that? Russell is in supreme form, tossing off one-liners with scorchingly precise timing, working those eyes and that mouth as if her life depended on it and carrying the film as if it were the easiest thing in the world to turn in such a remarkable star turn. She gets plenty of support from the delightful Janet Blair, the cool Brian Aherne, the appealing Richard Quine and others, but it's Russell that wins your heart and makes My Sister Eileen the kind of film you're always glad to run across on TV. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide
 



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