Talent Scout (1937) Poster

(1937)

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5/10
Another Warner B-film makes it to TCM...
Doylenf11 October 2006
A fired talent agent (DONALD WOODS) promotes an aspiring actress/singer to stardom. Where have you heard that one before? Woods is the brash, fast-talking agent (a departure from his usual placid roles), and Jeanne Madden is the girl he goes to great pains to promote. Frankly, Miss Madden is a singer with a not so spectacular voice and nothing about her suggests future stardom.

But it's the kind of plot Warner Bros. seemed to dust off occasionally in the future, with sparkling results. (Think MY DREAM IS YOURS with Doris Day, Jack Carson and Eve Arden or IT'S A GREAT FEELING, again with Day and Carson).

ROBERT PAIGE has a small role as a studio executive and FRED LAWRENCE does a nice job as the studio's matinée idol. But it's strictly a trifle nicely played by DONALD WOODS but ill served by a lackluster leading lady.
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5/10
Another supposedly behind the scenes picture about a country girl becoming a big-time actress.
planktonrules12 September 2020
"Talent Scout" is a B-movie from Warner Brothers. A B was a film intended as a second and cheaper movie in a double-feature. Many today think this means B-pictures were bad...this is not necessarily the case. Some Bs were terrific despite shorter run-times and lower budgets and lesser actors. Is "Talent Scout" a good B?

A fast-talking talent scout, Steve Stewart (Donald Woods), is having trouble finding good prospects for Apex Pictures. But when he sees and hears Mary (Jeanne Madden) singing in a small town, he's sure she'll make it in pictures and brings her to Hollywood. Unfortunately, her initial impression is poor and the studio passes on offering her a contract. But after singing at a local nightclub, her future is secure...as she's discovered by the boss' boss who immediately signs her. Is everything happily ever after now? Well, there are some hickups...including Steve AND a famous actor falling for her!

There is some irony to this film, as Jeanne Madden never did become a star....making just this and two other pictures. I can understand why, as her style of singing is not most folks' taste nor did she have the looks or screen presence of a star. I am sure she was a nice person in real life...but here she just seems a bit unconvincing as a vivacious big-time actress.

Despite this problem the film is quite watchable and a decent time-passer. Donald Woods comes off a bit better...and he did have a pretty substantial career. Worth seeing and clever at times...but also not much more than a film that pleases...just not too much.
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4/10
A rare opportunity to see to never was's on screen at the same time.
mark.waltz29 December 2018
Warning: Spoilers
No offense to the memories of both Jean Madden and Rosalind Marquis, with the combined screen credits of a dozen films between them (and two of the same), but their lack of screen charisma is very apparent from the moment they appear. This is the familiar story of and nobody discovered and turned into a movie star, and while Madden certainly has a lovely voice for singing in church and a pleasant personality, it is not the type of personality that makes for a screen goddess. she's as sweet as Marquis is nasty, with a later basically playing the Bebe Daniels to Madden's Ruby Keeler.

The talent scout of the title is Donald Woods, a more familiar name, probably best known for playing Charles Darnay in MGM film version of "A Tale of Two Cities", and forever listed in camp history by starring as the father in William Castle's "13 Ghosts". Here, he's your typical run-of-the-mill overachiever, repeating the same crud in trying to get someone discovered so he can move up at the studio where he works. by claiming that he discovered some of Warner Brother's greatest stars, including Pat O'Brien and Kay Francis you can tell that he's full of it. The film script has him achieving some success by being responsible for the discovery of Madden, but like Rosina Lawrence in MGM's "Pick a Star" of the same year, no big star was born.

When Madden has her first public appearance, there are quick glimpses of several Warner Brothers contract players, most notably Allen Jenkins and Joan Blondell who don't speak a word. I actually had to rewind the film several times to see who all was there and by the time I was done, I had to restrain aspirin with a high-pitched voice of Madden singing. Fred Lawrence appears as the egotistical male star who creates a rivalry between Madison and Marquis, providing one of the film's funniest scenes where the fake beard wearing Lawrence is accidentally set on fire by Madden. there were too many films of this sort that provided false hope for young actresses to want to come out to try their chance at film success, and very few of them are realistic.
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3/10
Movie Struck
lugonian9 September 2017
TALENT SCOUT (Warner Brothers, 1937), directed by William Clemens, is a very minor "B" musical/comedy that could have been an exceptional programmer about Hollywood and the movies, but it isn't. Taken from an original story by George R. Bilson, the product is far from original since it contains some elements lifted from the George S. Hoffman and Most Hart 1928 play and later screen adaptation to ONCE IN A LIFETIME (Universal, 1932) along with TWENTY MILLION SWEETHEARTS (Warners, 1934) featuring Pat O'Brien. Donald Woods goes against type doing a Pat O'Brien in the title role through his fast talking, quick thinking fashion. While the studio's relatively newcomer, Jeanne Madden, following her promising movie debut opposite Dick Powell in STAGE STRUCK (1936), gathers the most attention, for her second screen performance,unfortunately turns out to be both unrewarding and unmemorable.

The story opens on a cross country tour bus with outdoor sign reading "Beauty on Wheels" with Steve Stewart (Donald Woods), publicity man and talent scout for Apex Pictures riding along with numerous Hollywood starlets. After the bus gets stuck on in the mud, Steve hitches a ride with Jed Hoskins (John Pearson), a country yokel, to the nearest service station ten miles away for help. Dropped off at Joe's Place, Steve makes a collect call to A.J. Lambert (Joseph Crehan), the studio head, informing him of the situation, but gets fired instead "as of last Saturday." Stranded, Steve hitch-hikes his way to a small town in Detroit where he stops in a burlesque theater where he sees Mary Brannigan (Jeanne Madden) performing. Amazed by her talent, he takes her back with him to Hollywood at a promise of grooming her to major movie stardom. Following a screen test, M.B. Carter (Charles Halton) and Smith (David Carlyle) become disappointed with her song delivery through suggestions by Steve. However, he discovers the error in his ways after listening to Mary later singing a ballad in her own manner. She gets a spot singing at a charity benefit at KFWB Radio where this time, she becomes a sensation. Having her name changed to Doris Pierce, she soon stars in a series of motion pictures starring Raymond Crane (Fred Lawrence), much to the chagrin of Bernice Fox (Rosalind Marquis), his frequent co-star who loves him. Through the course of a year, Pierce and Crane have become a popular screen item. Having fallen in love with her, Steve intends on proposing to Mary, but finds she has other plans for her future. Others appearing in the cast are Teddy Hart (Moe Jerome); Helen Valkis (Ruth); David Carlyle (Bert Smith); and Frank Orth (The Theater Manager). Although Warner Brothers contract players as Allen Jenkins, Joan Blondell and Patricia Ellis are said to have cameo appearance in TALENT SCOUT, their scenes are actually clipped from their earlier movies, notably Jenkins from TWENTY MILLION SWEETHEARTS (1934) and Blondell from Broadway GONDOLIER (1935).

With a forgettable story comes such forgettable songs by M.K. Jerome and Jack Scholl as: "Silent Picture Days," "Silent Picture Days" (reprise); "I Am a Singer, You Are the Song," "I Am the Singer, You Are the Song" (reprise, all sung by Jeanne Madden); "No, No Senor" (sung by Rosalind Marquis, dance by ensemble); "Born to Love," "I Was Wrong" and "Born to Love" (all sung by Fred Lawrence and Jeanne Madden). Only "No, No Senor" gets a slight production number status at a movie studio set.

The problem with TALENT SCOUT is that it tries to put so much in its tight 62 minutes, resulting to very brief bits here and there indicating heavy editing and deleted scenes before the movie was released in theaters. Madden is introduced singing a song about silent picture days, but is not sung throughout. She sings a few bars of the song, then followed immediately with a scene where she's approached by the talent scout, and suddenly she's on her way to Hollywood. On the comedic side comes a rustic named Jed Hodkins who, for offering the talent scout and discoverer of "Dick Powell, Kay Francis and Pat O'Brien" a ride, and having the scout patiently listen to his rendition to "Am I Blue?," takes the talent scout seriously by coming to Apex Pictures later on to look him up for a job, only to get the run- around. Then there's Mary Treen as the no- nonsense secretary, Janet Morris, who allows playwrights Muscleman and Twirp (Eddie Acuff and Donald Kerr) to await in the waiting room for four months to meet with the studio head. And what's become of the stranded bus full of starlets earlier in the story is never explained.

As hard as the cast tries to deliver a fine performance, it just doesn't work. Jeanne Madden would appear in one more motion picture, SEA RACKETEERS (Republic, 1937) before leaving the motion picture business forever. Donald Wood would resume his usual style of acting for many years to come (playing the father in THIRTEEN GHOSTS (1960), for example), but never developed himself to a top leading mustache actor as Clark Gable. Never distributed to home video, this rarely seen TALENT SCOUT has been presented every so often on Turner Classic Movies, especially on themes of Hollywood's Hollywood, but don't expect too much. (**)
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6/10
a hollywood film about.... a hollywood film.
ksf-220 July 2021
Don Woods is Stewart, the wheeler dealer talent scout, zipping around the country on the studio's budget. He is smitten by Mary (Jeanne Madden), and brings her out to LA. She has a slow start in Hwood, but slowly picks up steam. And she sings. Several songs. I'm not a fan of scooping ( sliding into the next note, up or down), which she does constantly. Simple enough plot, nothing fawncy. It's a hollywood film about ... making hollywood films. With a lovers quadrangle. It's okay. Co-stars fred lawrence and rosalind marquis. Directed by Bill Clemens.
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