The Show-Off (1934 film)
The Show-Off | |
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Lobby card | |
Written by |
George Kelly (play) Herman J. Mankiewicz (screenplay) |
Starring | Spencer Tracy |
Edited by | William S. Gray |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release dates | 1934 |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $162,000[1][2] |
Box office | $397,000[1][2] |
The Show-Off is a 1934 film. It was the first movie Spencer Tracy made for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
Based on the hit play by George Kelly, it made a profit of $78,000.[1]
Plot
Out sailing one day, J. Aubrey Piper saves a man from drowning. He overhears an impressed Amy Fisher's remark and looks her up in New Jersey, irritating her family with his constant bragging but winning Amy, who marries him.
A humble railroad clerk, Aubrey keeps pretending to be a more important man. He spends lavishly, piling up so much debt that he and Amy must move in with her parents. He gets fired by his boss Preston for making a wild offer on a piece of land, overstepping his authority by far.
Amy is fed up and intends to leave him. Aubrey runs into her brother Joe, an inventor whose rust-prevention idea has received a firm offer of $5,000. Aubrey goes to the firm and demands Joe get $100,000 plus a 50% ownership interest. The company rescinds its offer entirely.
Everybody's fed up with Aubrey, but suddenly Joe rushes home to say the company's changed its mind, offering him $50,000 plus 20%. And the railroad property paid off, too, so Aubrey's offered his old job back, with a raise. He knows how lucky he's been and that he should just shut up, but he just can't.
Cast
- Spencer Tracy as Aubrey
- Madge Evans as Amy
- Claude Gillingwater as Preston
- Henry Wadsworth as Joe
- Lois Wilson as Clara
Radio adaptation
The Show-Off was adapted twice for radio by Lux Radio Theater. The first broadcast was on September 12, 1935, starring Joe E. Brown; the second was on February 2, 1943, starring Harold Peary.
References
External links
- The Show Off at IMDB
- The Show Off at TCMDB