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Ladies of the Chorus
Ladies of the Chorus
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Ladies of the Chorus
Reissue theatrical poster
Directed byPhil Karlson
Screenplay byHarry Sauber
Joseph Carole
Story byHarry Sauber
Produced byHarry A. Romm
StarringAdele Jergens
Marilyn Monroe
Rand Brooks
CinematographyFrank Redman
Edited byRichard Fantl
Music byGeorge Duning
Production
company
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
  • February 10, 1949 (1949-02-10)
Running time
61 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Ladies of the Chorus is a 1948 American musical romance film directed by Phil Karlson and starring Adele Jergens, Marilyn Monroe and Rand Brooks. The screenplay, written by Harry Sauber and Joseph Carole, was based on a story by Sauber.

Released by Columbia Pictures, Ladies of the Chorus features Marilyn Monroe in the first major role of her career. Considered a B film at the time of its release, it quickly disappeared from theaters, and Monroe's contract with Columbia was not renewed.

Upon the film's original theatrical release, Adele Jergens was credited first while Marilyn Monroe was billed second. After Monroe became a star in the early 1950s, Ladies of the Chorus was reissued to capitalize on Monroe's fame. Her name was placed before the title, not only in advertising but in the opening credits of the film itself.

Plot

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Peggy Martin and her mother Mae both work as burlesque chorus girls. After star Bubbles LaRue quits, stage manager Joe asks Mae to perform a special number, but Mae secretly arranges for Peggy to take the opportunity. Peggy's performance is so good that she is offered the starring spot.

One evening, Randy Carroll, a member of a wealthy society family in Cleveland, is brought to a performance by friends and becomes enamored of Peggy. Learning that Peggy generally does not accept dates because her mother disapproves, Randy adopts a subtle strategy. Every night, he sends Peggy an orchid, but does not sign the card. Curious about her secret admirer, Peggy asks the florist for the sender's identity. When the florist tells her that the man is due to arrive at any moment, Peggy waits for him. After they finally meet, Randy asks Peggy to dinner and she accepts, but she first invites him to meet her mother. Randy is surprised to learn that Mae is also a dancer, but he asks her to join them for dinner. Mae declines, but waits anxiously for Peggy to return home. When Peggy appears, she excitedly informs Mae that Randy has proposed marriage.

The next day, when Randy asks Mae for her consent, she warns him that there is a class difference between him and Peggy. In response to Randy's indifference, Mae recounts the story of her marriage to a Boston socialite, Peggy's father. After their marriage, her husband's family was horrified to learn how she made her living and had the marriage annulled. Randy protests that people are more broadminded now than they were in her day, and Mae agrees to the marriage on the condition that Randy tells his mother about Peggy's profession beforehand.

Randy fails to summon the courage to tell his mother Adele about Peggy's profession. Adele is delighted that Randy has fallen in love and invites Mae and Peggy for a visit. Adele plans a lavish engagement party for all of their friends, including Mae's old friend Billy Mackay, a retired burlesque comic who has loved Mae for years. At the party, the trio of musicians that Adele has hired to entertain recognize Peggy and ask her to sing, addressing her as "Peggy, the Queen of Burlesque" in front of all of the guests. The guests are scandalized, and feeling snubbed, Peggy and Mae attempt to leave, but Adele stops them, declaring that if they run away it will only make things worse.

Adele asks Billy to help her sing a song with the trio. Later, she announces to her shocked friends that she too had been a chorus girl. Billy secretly tells Mae that Adele had concocted the story to help Randy and Peggy. As Randy and Peggy embrace, Adele persuades Billy and Mae to make it a double wedding.

A publicity photo of Marilyn Monroe (who portrayed Peggy Martin) applying makeup on the set of the film in 1948

Cast

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Soundtrack

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Five of songs featured in the film were written by Lester Lee and Allan Roberts.[1] The song "Ubangi Love Song" performed by the Bobby True Trio was written by Buck Ram.

Song Actor(s)
"The Ladies of the Chorus" Marilyn Monroe, Adele Jergens and others
(Jergens' voice dubbed by Virginia Rees)
"Anyone Can See I Love You" Marilyn Monroe
"Every Baby Needs a Da Da Daddy" Marilyn Monroe
"I'm So Crazy for You" Adele Jergens
(dubbed by Virginia Rees)
"Ubangi Love Song" The Bobby True Trio
"You're Never Too Old" Nana Bryant

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Ladies of the Chorus is a American musical drama film directed by and produced by , notable for providing with her first leading role and her debut singing performance on screen. The story centers on a mother-daughter duo working as chorus performers in a revue, where the daughter's sudden rise to prominence leads to romantic complications with a wealthy admirer, complicated by class differences and familial concerns. Running approximately 60 minutes, the black-and-white film features original songs and highlights the era's culture while exploring themes of and maternal sacrifice. The film was shot over a brief period from April 22 to May 3, 1948, under producer Harry A. Romm, with by Frank Redman and sound recording via . It marked Monroe's only project with , for which she signed a six-month in March 1948, during which her hair was bleached to platinum blonde to fit the role's requirements; she also worked with acting coach Natasha Lystess to prepare. Released on February 10, 1949, Ladies of the Chorus was a low-budget B-movie typical of Columbia's output, emphasizing musical numbers and light drama over spectacle. In the narrative, veteran chorus girl May Martin (Adele Jergens) and her aspiring daughter Peggy (Marilyn Monroe) perform in a traveling show led by the temperamental star Bubbles LaRue. When Bubbles quits following a backstage dispute, Peggy steps into the spotlight with a specialty routine, earning acclaim and anonymous orchids from admirer Randy Carroll (), a shipping heir. Their romance blossoms, but May, haunted by her own failed marriage to a man from due to her profession, urges caution, fearing Randy's intentions and the disapproval of his mother (). The film includes Monroe performing such as "Anyone Can See I Love You" and "Every Baby Needs a Da Da Daddy," underscoring her character's charm and vulnerability. Though it received positive reviews upon release, particularly for Monroe's performance, Ladies of the Chorus has gained retrospective interest primarily for Monroe's early performance, which foreshadowed her iconic screen persona despite her later dismissal of the film as "dreadful." Supporting roles by Jergens as the protective mother and Brooks as the earnest suitor add emotional depth, while the production captures the gritty allure of mid-20th-century entertainment.

Production

Development

Ladies of the Chorus was conceived by in early 1948 as a low-budget musical romance intended to showcase emerging talent in the studio's B-movie lineup. The project originated as an original story without prior source material, centering on themes of class differences in a romantic context between a chorus girl and a wealthy suitor. Produced by Harry A. Romm, the screenplay was written by Harry Sauber and Joseph Carole, with Sauber also credited for the story. Phil Karlson directed the film, marking an early feature in his career following several quick-paced B-movies for from 1944 to 1947; his approach emphasized efficient production to fit the constraints of low-budget filmmaking. Budget limitations shaped the , resulting in a planned 61-minute runtime and reliance on minimal sets to keep costs down. These decisions aligned with Columbia's strategy for economical musicals during the era. Casting was completed in early 1948, with the studio selecting for her first starring role as Peggy Martin after her brief appearances in other films; Monroe had signed a six-month contract with Columbia in March 1948 specifically for this project. The script was finalized prior to filming, which began on April 22, 1948, allowing for a compressed timeline typical of B-films.

Filming

Principal photography for Ladies of the Chorus took place in 1948 at ' facilities in Hollywood, primarily on Stage 9 at the located at 1438 N. Gower Street in , . The production utilized soundstages to recreate the theater environment central to the story, allowing for controlled filming of interior scenes without on-location shoots. The film was shot in black-and-white using standard 35mm , a common format for low-budget features of the era. Cinematographer Frank Redman handled the visuals, focusing on efficient, simple lighting arrangements that highlighted the performers during musical sequences without complex setups. True to the rapid pace of B-movie productions at Columbia, wrapped in under two weeks, from April 22 to May 3, 1948, minimizing expenses on a modest typical for second-feature musicals. This tight limited resources for extensive rehearsals or elaborate production elements, resulting in straightforward staging for dance numbers and a reliance on practical sets over extravagant designs. In , editor Richard Fantl assembled the footage into a concise 61-minute runtime, emphasizing seamless transitions between and song segments. No significant reshoots were required, aligning with the efficient workflow of the studio's B-unit operations.

Cast and Crew

Cast

The principal cast of Ladies of the Chorus (1948) features as , the experienced burlesque performer and mother to the , a role that highlighted Jergens' frequent casting as vivacious blondes and dancers in B-movies despite her relative youth—she was only eight years older than her on-screen daughter. Jergens, a contract player since the early 1940s, brought her background in modeling and Broadway chorus work to the production, marking one of her many supporting turns in low-budget musicals. Marilyn Monroe portrays Peggy Martin, the aspiring chorus girl at the center of the story, in what was her first starring role and only film for after signing a six-month contract in March 1948. This appearance also marked Monroe's screen debut as a singer, performing numbers like "Anyone Can See I Love You," building on her prior bit parts at other studios while establishing her as a rising talent in musical comedies. Rand Brooks plays Randy Carroll, the affluent admirer who pursues Peggy, a supporting lead that drew on Brooks' established screen presence from his breakout role as Charles Hamilton in Gone with the Wind (1939), where he earned $500 weekly during production. Known primarily for westerns and romantic leads in the , Brooks delivered the film's first on-screen kiss to Monroe, adding to his tally of over 140 film and television credits. Nana Bryant appears as Mrs. Adele Carroll, Randy's disapproving mother whose refined background contrasts with the chorus world, a character suited to Bryant's long career in over 100 films as a character actress specializing in maternal and roles from onward. Bryant, a former Broadway performer with a decade of stage experience before entering Hollywood in 1935, lent elegance to the ensemble under director . The supporting cast includes Eddie Garr as Billy Mackay, the ; Steven Geray as Mr. Salisbury, Peggy's agent; Frank J. Scannell as Joe, the stage manager; and Marjorie Hoshelle as Bubbles LaRue, the headlining star, rounding out the burlesque theater ensemble with their established character work in films.

Crew

The crew of Ladies of the Chorus (1948), a low-budget musical produced by , consisted of experienced professionals working within the constraints of a B-movie production schedule and resources. Phil Karlson served as director, guiding the film's blend of romance and musical numbers while establishing his reputation in Columbia's second-feature unit after prior work at . His direction emphasized straightforward storytelling and efficient staging suited to the film's modest scope. Harry A. Romm acted as producer, managing the production's tight budget and timeline at Columbia, where he oversaw the assembly of cast and crew for this quick-turnaround project. The screenplay was written by Harry Sauber and Joseph Carole, who adapted the story by Sauber into a simple romance plot centered on class differences and family dynamics in the world. Frank Redman handled , capturing the film's black-and-white visuals with a focus on the theatricality of chorus scenes and intimate dramatic moments using standard Columbia studio techniques. Richard Fantl edited the film, ensuring a brisk pace that aligned with its 61-minute runtime and B-movie format. In the music department, George Duning composed the original score, while supervised the musical elements, including the integration of songs written by Allan Roberts and Lester Lee. Mischa Bakaleinikoff directed the music overall, coordinating orchestral support for the production numbers. Robert Peterson designed the art direction, creating simple sets that evoked a theater environment without elaborate period detail, in keeping with the film's economical production values. Jack Boyle staged the production numbers as dance director, choreographing the chorus routines to highlight the ensemble dynamics central to the story.

Story and Music

Plot

Ladies of the Chorus is a 61-minute black-and-white that unfolds in a straightforward narrative arc, beginning with the setup of the protagonists' lives in the world, building through romance and rising tensions, culminating in a confrontation over , and resolving in a joyful ending. The story opens in a burlesque theater where chorus girl Peggy Martin and her mother May both perform as dancers. When the show's star, Bubbles LaRue, quits following a dispute with May, stage manager Joe asks May to fill in with a specialty number, but May arranges for Peggy to take the spot instead. Peggy's elegant captivates the audience, propelling her to stardom and replacing Bubbles as the headliner. During one , wealthy Randy Carroll attends with friends and becomes instantly smitten with Peggy. To win her affection without revealing himself immediately, Randy sends her unsigned bouquets of orchids every night. Intrigued, Peggy visits the florist and waits to confront her admirer, leading to their first meeting. They quickly fall in love, share a dinner date (with May's reluctant permission), and Randy proposes that same evening. As the romance develops, conflicts emerge due to stark class differences between Peggy's background and Randy's elite upbringing. May, protective of her daughter, warns Randy of potential heartbreak, sharing her own painful history: she once married a from a wealthy , only for the union to be annulled by his disapproving upon learning of her profession as a chorus girl—making Peggy the product of that brief . Meanwhile, Randy's , Adele, learns of the and strongly opposes it, citing Peggy's unsuitable and low social standing. The climax occurs at the engagement party, where prejudices come to a head. May confronts about her biases, but it is Adele who ultimately resolves the tension by revealing her own secret past as a chorus girl in her youth. This disclosure bridges the class divide, dissolving Adele's objections and earning her blessing for the union. In the happy resolution, the film ends with Peggy and Randy's wedding, with May and Joe as attendants, affirming themes of acceptance and love transcending social barriers. Musical numbers are woven into the scenes to advance the plot.

Soundtrack

The soundtrack of Ladies of the Chorus features original songs composed specifically for the film, with music by Allan Roberts and lyrics by Lester Lee for the majority of the numbers. These songs were integral to the musical sequences, showcasing the setting and character dynamics without any commercial album release at the time of production; the music was designed exclusively for in-film performance. Five songs—"Ladies of the Chorus," "Anyone Can See I Love You," "Every Baby Needs a Da Da Daddy," "I'm So Crazy for You," and "You're Never Too Old"—were written by this team, while one additional track was a pre-existing composition. The film's musical highlights include ensemble and solo performances that advance the story's romantic and comedic elements. Below is a list of the key songs, including their writers and performance details:
Song TitleWritersPerformersContext in Film
"Ladies of the Chorus"Allan Roberts (music), Lester Lee (), (voice dubbed by Virginia Rees), and chorus Opening number introducing the chorus girls and the atmosphere.
"Ubangi Love Song"The Bobby True TrioUpbeat instrumental and vocal performance during a segment, adding exotic flair to the show.
"Anyone Can See I Love You"Allan Roberts (music), Lester Lee () and Rand BrooksDuet emphasizing the budding romance between the leads in a tender, lighthearted moment.
"Every Baby Needs a Da Da Daddy"Allan Roberts (music), Lester Lee ()Solo by Monroe in a playful, comedic routine that highlights her character's flirtatious persona.
"I'm So Crazy for You"Allan Roberts (music), Lester Lee ()Chorus and principalsSupportive piece underscoring romantic tension within the troupe.
"You're Never Too Old"Allan Roberts (music), Lester Lee ()Chorus Humorous group number commenting on age and relationships in the world.
Instrumental underscoring by George Duning complements the songs, providing transitions between the revue scenes and dramatic interludes. This low-budget production's music marked Marilyn Monroe's first on-screen appearance, with her vocals undubbed throughout.

Release and Reception

Release

Ladies of the Chorus was produced and distributed by Corporation. The film premiered in the United States on February 10, 1949. Initially released as a low-budget feature, it played in limited theatrical engagements, often as part of double bills typical for B-movies of the era. The distribution emphasized domestic markets, with no documented international premieres. In November 1952, Columbia Pictures reissued the to capitalize on Marilyn Monroe's burgeoning stardom in 1952. For the re-release, promotional materials and opening credits were updated to give Monroe top billing above the title, shifting to the supporting cast. This reissue provided a modest uptick in visibility, though comprehensive data remains unavailable.

Reception

Upon its 1949 release, Ladies of the Chorus was generally dismissed by critics as a formulaic B-musical with a predictable plot centered on class differences in romance, though it garnered praise for Marilyn Monroe's emerging charm and vocal performance. The Motion Picture Herald described Monroe as "one of the bright spots," noting she was "pretty and, with her pleasing voice, registers strongly in the numbers she sings." Similarly, reviews highlighted the film's routine production values and forgettable songs, but acknowledged its entertaining mother-daughter dynamic between Monroe and . The film faded quickly from theaters due to its low-budget profile and lack of major star power at the time, achieving only modest returns without widespread audience attention. Columbia reissued Ladies of the Chorus in November 1952 to capitalize on Monroe's growing fame, prompting mixed retrospective notices that reevaluated her performance more favorably while still viewing the picture as a minor, unremarkable work overall. In modern assessments, the film is primarily valued as an early showcase for Monroe's talent, with critics appreciating its lighthearted depiction of life despite clichéd elements. It holds an user rating of 6.1/10 from over 1,700 votes and a 50% audience score on , reflecting its niche appeal; the picture received no awards or nominations.

Legacy

Monroe's Role

Ladies of the Chorus (1949) marked Marilyn Monroe's first starring role at the age of 22, following a series of uncredited bit parts in films such as Dangerous Years (1947). In the low-budget musical, Monroe portrayed Peggy Martin, a bubbly and ambitious burlesque chorus girl who rises to prominence after replacing the show's star and navigates a romance with a wealthy suitor. The role provided Monroe with significantly more screen time than her prior appearances, allowing her to showcase her singing and dancing talents through numbers like "Anyone Can See I Love You" and "Every Baby Needs a Da-Da-Daddy." To prepare for the part, Monroe underwent vocal training with the film's musical director, , who helped refine her singing voice and musical phrasing for the production numbers. She also received acting instruction from ' drama coach, , marking the beginning of a long-term professional relationship. These efforts enabled Monroe to deliver a performance that blended comedic timing with dramatic depth, highlighting her emerging screen presence. The film played a pivotal role in Monroe's early career trajectory, earning her positive notices for her vocal abilities and contributing to the development of her iconic "blonde bombshell" image through her glamorous portrayal of the vivacious performer. Signed to a six-month contract with Columbia in March 1948, Monroe's work in Ladies of the Chorus—filmed during this period—led to a temporary extension, but the studio declined to renew her option in September 1948, releasing her shortly after production wrapped. On set, Monroe developed a warm, mentor-like chemistry with co-star , who played her on-screen mother despite being only nine years older, fostering a supportive dynamic that mirrored their characters' relationship. This underscored Monroe's ability to form genuine connections amid the challenges of her nascent Hollywood journey.

Cultural Impact

Ladies of the Chorus serves as a notable B-movie artifact from the late , exemplifying the musical genre that blended light entertainment with narratives of social aspiration in post-World War II America. The film explores themes of class mobility through its story of chorus performers navigating romance across social divides, reflecting the era's about upward mobility amid economic recovery. The movie holds a significant place in 's legacy, frequently referenced in biographical accounts as her first starring role and an early showcase of her singing and dancing talents, despite its modest commercial success. It marked a pivotal, if minor, step in her transition from bit parts to prominence, often highlighted in discussions of her formative Hollywood years. The film has appeared in documentaries on Monroe's early career, such as Netflix's The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes (2022), where clips underscore her burgeoning screen presence. Due to failure to renew the copyright, Ladies of the Chorus entered the in the United States on January 1, 1978, facilitating its preservation and wide accessibility on free streaming platforms by the 2020s. This status has enabled unrestricted distribution, including full viewings on sites like , ensuring the film's survival as an accessible piece of Hollywood history. In contemporary , it is studied for its portrayal of gender roles in the entertainment industry, depicting as both glamorous figures and vulnerable workers challenging traditional expectations. Occasional screenings occur at film festivals dedicated to Monroe or classic cinema, such as the 2023 Columbus Moving Picture Show, reinforcing its niche endurance. While lacking major adaptations or direct homages, the film contributes to broader analyses of women's career trajectories during Hollywood's .
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