I absolutely LUV this "Swing Is Here To Stay"number-starring Eddie Cantor,Jeni Le Hon and The Peters Sisters..this has to be some of Jeni Or Bob's best rhythm tap work..Her rhythm tapping is just as incredible &beautiful as her legs and complete being and presence! And the Peters Sisters not only had incredible voices and harmonies..but they can really swing and tap too! And the all-black male chorus that backs up Cantor in this number all have such incredible range and such beautiful and hip harmony..and there vocal impressions of various musical instruments during their singing of this number is so hip and wonderful! I am now a huge fan of Eddie Cantor,Jeni Le Gon and The Peters Sisters..since I've now seen this number for the first time! I wish television would just dump most all the unrealistic"Criminal Minds"type of serial killer&crime shows and most of the cop shows(except for"Blue Bloods"&"48 Hours")..and replace them with the type of entertainment I just saw in the Eddie Cantor"Swing Is Here To Stay"number!
@thegoddessdiana91855 жыл бұрын
The solo dancer, Jeni Le Gon, had a dance studio in 1950's L.A. where she was training young dancers. I watched a rehearsal with my mom at the old Ebony Showcase Theatre on Washington Blvd. The students were moving diagonally across the stage practicing transitioning to flying leaps from walking : 3 steps then leap, etc.
2 жыл бұрын
I love the way Eddie moves in his performances and his facial expressions. he sings and dances in such a crazy cartoonish way lol
@davemiller4721 Жыл бұрын
By 1937, Cantor was a major radio star, but he had been doing numbers like this for 30 years on the stage. The earliest film of Cantor seems to be that 1923 short with the synced sound. What he must have been like - the energy of his performance - on the stage between 1910-1920 as a young man, we can only imagine. This is but a taste of that.
@sebastianorizzo21576 жыл бұрын
The Peters Sisters are WONDERFUL AND EXTREMLY SWINGING
@marvinmuonekejazz11 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing. Eddie Cantor is amazing!
@torriemadden37733 жыл бұрын
Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery - Oscar Wilde.
@miguelconesa-osuna49823 жыл бұрын
Amazing performers, voices and dancers...
@drednm15 жыл бұрын
SUPERB... one of Eddie Cantor's best numbers. It incorporates all his stage schtick into a terrific musical number. The dancer is Jeni Le Gon (who is still alive) and the fabulous Peters Sisters. Just a wonderful song and dance number that lampoons popular dance crazes of the era: Struttin', Peckin', and the Suzy Q. Cantor was one of the biggest stars of this time, famous of black face and dancing. His renditions of "If You Knew Suzy" and "Whoopee" were among the biggest songs of the time.
@bobbrawley94397 жыл бұрын
drednm Thanks for those names . I look them up. ? Im amazed that anybody can identify black actors, many times uncredited.
@hebneh12 жыл бұрын
Swing was a huge fad starting around 1936, and just like the lyrics of this song say, it was loved internationally. About 20 years later, rock & roll achieved the same thing - if not more so.
3 жыл бұрын
I wish swing could be loved internationally again ...
@devatiriya13 жыл бұрын
I used to have this on tape... thank you for sharing what is one of the most wonderful songs of all times.;Eddie and Friends really show us young ones how to rock!
@dennismurphy99574 жыл бұрын
RE: Blackface. Cantor was a person of his times, as are we. 100 years from now people will look back at us and say, "How could those people back then let 18,000 children die each day from dirty water and/or malnutrition and at the same time they spent big money on armaments and space adventures?"
@tomcollins426110 ай бұрын
Something else about Cantor is that he plays the same character whether he's in blackface or not. He doesn't put on the makeup and then turn into someone unrealistically stupid, or some other insulting stereotype. He's always just being Eddie Cantor. It's a good thing times have changed, but even in those times, Cantor wasn't demeaning. (And I agree with you about those future generations!)
@RobinPratt12 жыл бұрын
ABSOLUTELY FABULOUS!!!
@markcampbell9243 жыл бұрын
There is an episode of Pee Wees Playhouse where Pee Wee Herman Paul Reubens is looking through The magic glasses and a Clip of a man dancing in Bagdad looks like Eddie Cantor .Cowboy Curtis also Looks through the magic glasses and sees the same Old movie clip. I wonder if that old movie clip is from Ali Baba Goes To Town? The name of the Pee Wees Playhouse Episode is Just Another Day At the Playhouse.
@masercot9 ай бұрын
The trio is the Peters Sisters...
@nicoley13214 жыл бұрын
Cab Calloway: the universal language understood by black people throughout history
@markcampbell9243 жыл бұрын
When AMC showed Ali Baba Goes To Town they left out The beautiful song that Tony Martin sang to the Daughter princess of the Sheik (Gypsy Rose Lee's Sister was her name June Lang).
@1psoas916 жыл бұрын
WHo're his back-up dancers? The really heavy-set woman has a fanastic rhythm-sense, and does hte most wonderful things with her shoulders and head.
@steveliveshere3 жыл бұрын
A redeeming feature of this pre-code number is having a major white star appearing with black performers in the same number. This is something that virtually disappeared after the production code kicked in.
@hebneh3 жыл бұрын
This isn't pre-code. The Hays Code went into effect in 1934 and this movie was made three years later. And there was no ban on a white performer appearing with a Black one in the same number - keep in mind that Shirley Temple and Bill Robinson danced together in films repeatedly at this time, for example. What WAS prohibited were scenes of interracial romance or implied sex, none of which occurs here.
@craigf7628 Жыл бұрын
This is from the 1937 movie Ali Baba Goes to Town. I googled it.
@johni17269 ай бұрын
Admiring the talent and insulted at the same time. Damn.
@factsmatter23938 ай бұрын
exactly!
@pinkiesue8499 жыл бұрын
I would like to see this movie someday...does anyone know where I could see this? thanks,
@alinasten9 жыл бұрын
Ali Baba Goes to Town.
@pinkiesue8499 жыл бұрын
Thank you Alina
@alinasten9 жыл бұрын
Sue Elias You're welcome.
@dajghoti2515 жыл бұрын
There was a time when a "white" man singing "black" music was illegal so when an entertainer wanted to sing "black" music he went "black face". It was meant as appreciation not degredation
@johni17269 ай бұрын
Really?
@janedevries22317 жыл бұрын
It's hard to believe that no one back then saw anything wrong with Black face.
@Rollich17 жыл бұрын
Or with ridiculing Jews, Italians, Germans, Irish ... It was a better time with no PC and far less sensitivity and much more good humor.
@______6385 жыл бұрын
because it was a an homage to blacks not a mockery of them you dummy. lightskin blacks wore blackface too. it was an artform - like wearing whiteface as a mime or geisha. the stigma is recent and a re-write of history to divide the races and increase hatred of the white jews most famous for wearing it - like jolson and cantor.
@margaretthomas88994 жыл бұрын
@@______638 It is not what is on the Head,or the face, or body, but what is in the Heart that counts, THIS IS PURE ENTERTAINMENT!! nothing else!
@susanlloyd73955 жыл бұрын
Oy vey. Eddie. I love Cantor but by that time, he should have know better.