|
The Cocoanuts (1929)
In the Marx Brothers' debut 96-minute film with music
and lyrics by Irving Berlin - one of the earliest successful talkie
films; it was derived from a Broadway musical stage hit and marked
by
numerous clever one-liners and puns and some memorable sequences,
but also plagued with long musical interludes and stage-bound, primitive
and unspired direction:
Title Credits Visual Screen of Entire Cast
|
- during the title credits, there was one visual screen
with cameo portraits of each major cast member, identified with
both their real names and character names
- the film's story was set in the 1920s and opened
on a Florida beach shoreline where vacationeers lounged, sunbathed,
and were served food and drinks, and a bevy of 20 chorus girls in
skimpy tank-top bathing suits were lined up in four rows and were
performing an athletic, calisthenic dance, and lifeguards posed
as they scanned the beach with binoculars
- the
main character was leering and corrupt real
estate salesman Mr. Hammer (Groucho Marx)
who owned and managed the struggling, basically vacant beach-front
resort Hotel de Cocoanut, with his conservative assistant Jamison
(Zeppo Marx); Hammer talked his demanding
male and female bellhop employees out of their paychecks, reasoning:
("Wages? Do you want to be wage slaves, answer me that....Well, what makes
wage slaves? Wages! I want you to be free...One for all, and all
for me, and me for you, and three for five and six for a quarter")
- Jamison presented Hammer with an unsigned Western
Union telegram, announcing two guests' arrival as high-paying clients:
("We arrive this afternoon on the 4:30. Kindly reserve two floors
and three ceilings....If we like your property, we will immediately buy it")
- meanwhile on the hotel terrace, scheming, unethical
socialite Penelope Martin (Kay Francis) proposed to glum partner-in-crime,
socially-prominent, in-debt cad Harvey Yates (Cyril Ring) that
they could make millions if he was unable to marry rich ingenue
Polly Potter (Mary Eaton), the daughter of wealthy widow Mrs. Potter
(Margaret Dumont - Groucho's favorite foil); if he could acquire
Mrs. Potter's key, she would sneak into Mrs. Potter's hotel room
(next to hers in Room #320 through a connecting, unlocked doorway)
and steal her expensive diamond necklace locked in her dresser
- Mrs. Potter wished her cute blonde daughter Polly
to marry Harvey Yates, but Polly insisted on
being with Bob Adams (Oscar Shaw), a lowly aspiring architect
who worked at the hotel as a clerk; also on the hotel terrace,
Bob told his girlfriend Polly that he had dreams of developing
a nearby area of land and calling it Cocoanut Manor
- Mrs. Potter was being conned and courted by fast-talking
Hammer to acquire her money, and to fleece speculators by auctioning
off Florida 'swamp land' in the Cocoanut Manor area: ("Here
it is, Cocoanut Manor -- forty-two hours from Times Square by railroad.
16 hundred miles as the crow flies, 18 hundred as the horseflies.
There you are, Cocoanut Manor -- glorifying the American sewer
and the Florida sucker");
he went into a long diatribe with her about a land boom
in Florida real estate, but judged the Cocoanut Beach area
as the "black
spot" of Florida - with "no snow, no ice, and no business";
he also joked about the vacant, nearby residential suburban area
of Cocoanut Manor: ("It's the most exclusive residential
district in Florida. Nobody lives there")
- at the hotel's front desk, Hammer performed his
famous ice-water routine when he answered a phone call from a guest
in Room # 318 (Mrs. Potter's room!) requesting ice: "Oh,
you want some [ice water]. Get some onions, that'll make your eyes
(ice) water"
- two freeloaders arrived in the lobby: Harpo (Harpo
Marx, a harp and clarinet player), who appeared with a honking
walking stick-cane, and Italian Chico (piano-playing Chico Marx);
they had sent the telegram announcing their arrival, but Hammer
said there were no room vacancies; Harpo
ate plucked buttons from a bellhop's uniform, regarding them as
candy; Hammer noticed their empty suitcase, but Chico explained
that they would later fill it - with stolen goods: (Chico: "We
fill it up before we leave"); Chico
negotiated with Hammer for a room: (Hammer: "What do you
want? Would you like a suite ('Swede') on the third floor?" Chico:
"No. I'll take a Pollack in the basement"); when Chico
asked to "double up" in a room, Hammer responded that he could
easily cause stomach cramps with a fresh fruit diet: "Well, eat some
green apples"
- at the front desk, the undomesticated
Harpo hurled pens at the wall in an imaginary game of darts, and
Hammer (pretending to be a carnival pitchman) rewarded him with
a cigar; behind the desk, Harpo also grabbed guests' mail from
boxes and tore the letters up; he also stuck a pen into a desk
sponge and began eating it (and smearing it with glue); he drank
ink from an inkwell to wash it down, and chewed on buckweat flowers
in a vase; (later, he came back and nibbled on the telephone mouthpiece);
he also jumped behind the desk and rifled through the opened cash
register (and then treated the keys as a sound maker with Chico
to rhythmically sing "The Anvil Chorus"); afterwards, using multiple
call bells, they summoned almost a dozen female bell-hops to the
front lobby, and then chased after them
Harpo Ripping Up Hotel Guests' Mail
|
Harpo Eating Items at the Hotel's Front Desk
|
The "Anvil Chorus" Played On the Hotel's Cash Register
|
- spontaneously, Hammer, Chico, and Harpo re-enacted Willard's
famous "Spirit Of 76" painting in the hotel lobby, by pretending to march off as
a fife and drum corps of the American Revolutionary War, playing an imaginary
flute and drumming; Hammer placed a handkerchief as a bandage on his
forehead
- meanwhile, Penelope and Yates conspired to scapegoat
the two petty criminal-freeloaders as the two culprits who had stolen Mrs. Potter's
necklace, by having them appear outside Mrs. Potter's room (Room
#318) at the time of the planned robbery
- Chico humorously told Harpo how he desperately needed
money: "Right now I'd do anything for money! I'd kill somebody
for money. I'd kill you for money. (pause) Ha ha ha. Ah, no. You're
my friend. I kill you for nothing"
- tall law enforcement officer Detective Hennessey
(Basil Ruysdael) entered the hotel lobby, and immediately treated Harpo and Chico suspicously; he revealed
his badge under his coat; Harpo responded by revealing a liquor bottle
under his coat in the same place; as Hennessey left, Harpo revealed
he had stolen his badge
- the pompous pretender Mr. Hammer simultaneously courted
and insulted Mrs. Potter: ("Your eyes, your eyes, they shine like
the pants of a blue serge suit....That's not a reflection on you - it's
on the pants"); he asked: "Are you sure your husband's dead?...Oh,
but I love you, I love you! Can't you see how I'm pining for you?";
when asked by Mrs. Potter if he would be interested
in her if she was poor: ("I don't think you'd love me if I were
poor"), Hammer responded: "I might, but I'd keep my mouth shut"); then
he tried to literally wrestle her, grab her and seduce her: "Well, say,
that you'll be truly mine, or truly yours, or yours truly....Just think,
tonight, tonight, when the moon is sneaking around the clouds, I'll be sneaking
around you. I'll meet you tonight under the moon. Oh, I can see you now you
and the moon. You wear a neck-tie so I'll know ya"
|
|
Hammer Attempting to Seduce Mrs. Potter
|
- in her room #320, Penelope tentatively entered connecting
room #318 (Mrs. Potter's room), as Harpo entered her room from the
hallway and then hid under her bed; he observed and listened
as Harvey entered Penelope's room from the hallway and gave her the
key to Mrs. Potter's locked jewelry case; he suggested that after
the theft, the purloined diamond necklace could be stashed in a hollow
tree stump a mile away; he gave her a map (with his notes) of the
area, known as Cocoanut Manor; Harpo snatched
the map with notes when Penelope dropped it into his hat (believing
it was a wastebasket)
- there was a short sequence of synchronized peekaboo,
including the slow and rapid opening and slamming of hotel doors
(at first, Hammer was at the outer door to #318, Penelope at the
connecting door, and Chico at the outer hall door to #320); soon
the three played a dizzying and confusing game of appearing and
disappearing through all the doors of the adjoining rooms; Hammer
addressed the camera: "This
hotel not only has running water, it has running guests"; soon
after Mrs. Potter arrived in her room, and Detective Hennessey also
entered to look around (with Hammer shadowing him and keeping pace
behind him without being detected)
- during the crazy shenanigans in the connected rooms,
Penelope was able to sneak into #318, open Mrs. Potter's dressing
table drawer, and remove her necklace from the locked case; she then
put the jewelry down the front of her dress before exiting into the
hallway and back to her room
- Hammer orchestrated a rigged
Florida land auction sequence to sell lots in nearby Cocoanut Manor;
there was clever wordplay between the two about
lots: (Hammer: "You know what a lot is?" Chico: "Yeah,
its-a too much" Hammer: "I-I don't mean a whole lot, just a
little lot with nothing on it." Chico: "Any time you gotta
too much, you gotta whole lot....Sometimes you got a little bit. You
no think it's enough, somebody else maybe think it's-a too much, it's-a
whole lot too. Now, it's-a whole lot, it's-a too much, it's-a too much,
it's-a whole lot -- same thing")
- Hammer showed Chico a wet blueprint map of the area
to be auctioned off: "On this site, we're going to build an
Eye and Ear Hospital. This is gonna be a sight for sore eyes. You
understand?"; Hammer also described the river area: "And all along the river,
all along the river, those are all levees (Levites)"; Chico
asked: "That's the Jewish neighborhood?"; Hammer paused before answering: "Well,
we'll Passover that"
- their conversation segued into the
film's most famous sequence - a tongue-twisting, precisely-timed "viaduct"/"Why
a Duck?" routine between con man Chico and Hammer, beginning
with: "Now here is a little peninsula and here is a viaduct
leading over to the mainland"; Chico obfuscated and kept replying: "Why a duck?"
- Chico was chosen to aid him by masquerading as a bidder
to inflate the sales prices ("If somebody says $100, you say $200");
at the auction site, Hammer called everyone's attention to the upcoming
auction: "All ye suckers who are gonna get trimmed, step this way
for the big swindle!"; before the questionable auction commenced, Polly (in a thin sundress) provided
entertainment by singing: "The Monkey-Doodle-Doo";
as she twirled around and danced, she was backed by a troupe of dancers
in jungle costumes
- as the auction began, the swindling promoter and auctioneer
Hammer spoke: "Florida, folks! Sunshine, sunshine! Perpetual sunshine
all the year around! Let's get the auction started before we get
a tornado"; he described the residences to be built on the lots,
and offered a worthless personal guarantee: "You can have any kind
of a home you want to. You can even get stucco -- Oh, how you can
get stuck-o!"; he added: "Now is the time to buy while the new boom
is on. Remember that old saying: 'a new boom sweeps clean' and don't forget the guarantee - my
personal guarantee: If these lots don't double in value in a year,
I don't know what you can do about it"
- Chico got carried away and persistently did most of
the auction bidding, and kept outbidding himself!; after the aggravated
Hammer sold his first lot to Chico, he told Jamison: "Wrap up
that lot and put some poison ivy on it"; he also offered additional
words of advice: "Believe me, you gotta get up early if you want to get out of bed"; Chico
bragged about his bidding abilities: "When I start, I no stop-a for
nothing. I bid 'em up. I go higher, higher, higher, all the time
is go higher"; after Chico stalked off in a huff, Hammer was forced
to beg for bids and threatened to quit: ("Well, if there's not gonna
be any more bidding, I might as well quit. What's the matter with
you people? Can't you visualize bargains? Don't you want to make
money?")
- Mrs. Potter broke up the auction by announcing distressful
news that she had been robbed of her expensive diamond
necklace worth $100,000 dollars; Hammer asked: "Was it valuable?"; she
offered a reward of $1,000 dollars, but Chico out-bid her and offered
$2,000 dollars
- bumbling and gullible Detective Hennessey entered
to investigate the theft, and quickly suspected Harpo; to
vindicate himself, Harpo led everyone to the tree stump and fished
out the stolen necklace; but Hennessey felt he was being fooled:
"So that's it! I saw you in that room last night. Grabbin' off
stuff for the reward, eh? Now, then, you -- come clean!"; Harvey
stepped forward and insinuated that Polly's suitor Bob Adams, who
had outbid Harvey for the lot where the tree was located, was the
actual culprit
- Penelope reinforced Harvey's suspicions by framing
Bob; she claimed that he had told her the night before that he had
stolen the necklace for her; Penelope further lied when she claimed: "He
didn't know what he was doing. I begged him to take it back";
Hennessey arrested Bob and led him away, as Mrs. Potter denounced
Polly's fiancee; she confirmed that Polly would be marrying Harvey
instead: ("Your engagement will be announced tonight")
- in the next scene, Chico and Harpo attempted to break
Bob out of jail, and he became eager to join them when he learned
that Polly was being set up to marry Harvey Yates; kleptomaniac and
pickpocket Harpo proved Bob's innocence, by providing the thieves'
map and note (Harpo had stolen it while hiding under Penelope's hotel
room bed)
- on the hotel terrace that evening, a nonsensical,
South American gaucho-themed wedding announcement party and dinner
was held; chorus girls danced, viewed with an innovative, pre-Busby
Berkeley aerial shot of their choreography as they created kaleidoscopic
patterns; they also formed a chorus line and performed synchronized
kicks and arm-waving; wearing a low-cut gown, Polly sang a refrain
of "When My Dreams Come True"
- during the theme party, the brothers stole Detective
Hennessey's undershirt (who complained "Who got my shirt?! What's
become of my shirt? I want my shirt") as they played a game of tic-tac-toe
on it; in a musical sequence known as "I Lost My Shirt," the guests
sang "The Tale of the Shirt" to the tune of Georges Bizet's Carmen
At the Wedding Announcement Party and Dinner
|
Marx. Bros. in Ludicrous Gaucho Costumes at Party
|
Hennessey: "I Want My Shirt!"
|
Playing Tic-Tac-Toe on Hennessey's Undershirt
|
The Progressively Drunken Harpo at the Party
|
- Hammer was appointed the Master of Ceremonies at the
dinner and delivered a non-sensical rambling speech as he stood on
a chair, while Harpo became progressively more and more inebriated
as he kept leaving the scene to visit the spiked punch-bowl; Hammer
then introduced Mrs. Potter as "the well-preserved and partially
pickled, Mrs. Potter";
he criticized her as she spoke: "The old gal is stewed to the
eyebrows"; Chico entertained the guests at the piano with the
playing of Victor Herbert's "Gypsy
Love Song," while often using his trademark "shoot the
keys" technique
- afterwards, Polly stood up and incriminated Harvey
for drawing a map to Cocoanut Manor's tree stump where the jewels
were hidden, since his handwriting matched an engagement note he
had also written to her; the crooked Yates fled from the party as legitimate
land tycoon John W. Berryman arrived; he offered to purchase Bob's
design plans for Cocoanut Manor, and asked Hammer if he could accommodate
400 guests for the weekend; the threesome of Hammer, Chico, and Harpo
quickly exited the table
Polly Exposing the Duplicity of the Crooked Yates
- The Author of Notes on a Map Showing the Location of Tree Stump
With Stolen Jewels
|
Mrs. Potter Announcing New Wedding Plans for Bob Adams
and Polly
|
- now declared innocent, Bob's fortunes improved when Mrs. Potter
apologized and announced a change in the proceedings - her daughter would now be marrying
bridegroom Robert Adams; nearby, Hennessey's new handcuffed prisoners
were Yates and Penelope
|
Opening Sequence on a Florida Beach: Athletic Bathing Beauties
Hotel Manager Mr. Hammer (Groucho Marx) with Unpaid Bell-Hops
Penelope Martin (Kay Francis) Scheming with Social Cad Harvey Yates (Cyril
Ring) to Steal Mrs. Potter's Necklace
Lovers: Bob Adams and Miss Polly Potter
Polly Reprimanded by her Mother, Wealthy Widow Mrs. Potter (Margaret
Dumont), For Being With Bob
Florida Hotel Owner Mr. Hammer (Groucho Marx) with Mrs.
Potter
Two Freeloaders: Chico and Harpo with Mr. Hammer in the Hotel's Lobby
Threesome Re-Enacting 'Spirit of '76' March in Lobby
Police Detective Hennessey Showing His Badge, and Harpo Showing
a Liquor Bottle
Penelope Plotting with Harvey in Her Room (#320) to Steal Mrs. Potter's
Necklace, and Hide it In a Tree Stump
Lots of Running Around in Connecting Hotel Rooms (l: #318
and r: #320) - An Early Split-Screen
Penelope's Theft of Mrs. Potter's Necklace
Wordplay About Sale of Lots at Cocoanut Manor Between Chico and Hammer
"Why a Duck?" (Viaduct) Routine Between Hammer
and Chico
Polly Twirling Around in a Skimpy Sun Dress with Jungle-Costumed Dancers ("The
Monkey-Doodle-Doo")
Hammer Leading a Rigged Land Auction with Chico as His
Main Bidder
Hammer Offering Asides During the Auction
Harpo Locating Mrs. Potter's Necklace Hidden in Nearby Tree Stump
Fiancee Bob Adams Framed by Penelope and Denounced by Mrs. Potter
Bob's Jail-Break
Innovative Aerial View of Dancers at Engagement Announcement Party
Polly Singing: "When My Dreams Come True"
The Conclusion: The Happily-Engaged Couple
|