Duffy's Tavern (1945) Poster

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7/10
For fans of Old Time Radio and Hollywood in the 40's
jennyp-27 June 2006
"Hello - Duffy's Tavern where the elite meet to eat, Archie the manager speakin', Duffy ain't here. – Oh, hello Duffy." This greeting, preceded by "When Irish Eyes are Smiling" played on a tinny piano, announced to millions of radio listeners that it was time for DUFFY'S TAVERN. Fans of this popular program knew they were in store for laughs, big-name guest stars, sometimes a little music and always their favorite characters holding forth at the New York dive headed by Archie himself. Ed Gardner, a former piano player, salesman, talent agent and radio director (in that order) created the program and cast himself in the lead when he couldn't find an actor that spoke "New York bartender" as well as he did. The series ran from 1941-1952, premiering on the CBS Radio Network and later moving to NBC. Each episode opened with the proprietor Duffy, who never appeared, phoning his manager and setting up the action that would follow in the next half hour. Archie was known for insulting his guest stars and his Damon Runyanesque speech. (In fact Abe Burrows, co-writer with Runyon of GUYS AND DOLLS, got his start on DUFFY'S TAVERN.) Regulars included Eddie Green as the wise-cracking Eddie the waiter and Charles Cantor as the intellectually-challenged Finnegan. Gardner's wife Shirley Booth originated the role of Miss Duffy, the ditzy, man-hungry daughter of the owner. At least a dozen other actresses played the role during the series 11 year run. Though DUFFY'S TAVERN made the transition to television in 1954, it only lasted for one season. The program inspired future TV shows with a friendly neighborhood bar as the setting, most notably Jackie Gleason's "Joe the Bartender" sketches with Crazy Googenheim (Frank Fontaine) filling in for Finnegan, ARCHIE BUNKER'S PLACE, and the 1980's sitcom CHEERS. Lucky for us, at least 100 episodes of the radio series survive and are available on cassette and MP3.

Attempting to duplicate the success of other radio programs that made the transition to the big screen (FIBBER MCGEE & MOLLY, THE GREAT GILDERSLEEVE, HENRY ALDRICH, etc.), studio executives at both MGM and Paramount set their sites on Duffy's for their next radio crossover picture. Paramount's proposal of a "stars-go-all-out-for-the-war-effort" variety film in the vein of Hollywood CANTEEN and THANK YOUR LUCK STARS caught Gardner's fancy. And so it was that contract players Bing Crosby, Betty Hutton, Eddie Bracken, Robert Benchley and more than two dozen others were signed up for cameos while the radio actors (save for Broadway actress Ann Thomas as a new Miss Duffy) reprised their familiar roles.

The story is a pretty basic "let's put on a show to save the __________." Unbeknownst to his boss Duffy, soft-hearted Archie has been providing out-of-work veterans with free meals and spirits. The servicemen had worked at a phonograph record company owned by Archie's pal Michael O'Malley (Victor Moore) before the war. The factory was forced to close because of a war time shortage of shellac and the bank turned down a loan to O'Malley to reopen the plant. O'Malley's daughter Peggy (Marjorie Reynolds) works as a switchboard operator at a hotel where a number of celebrities are staying. In due course the stars are persuaded to help raise funds to reopen the plant by performing at a block party hosted by our favorite barkeep. There are some yucks along the way, a little romance between Peggy and soldier Danny Murphy (Barry Nelson) and plenty of entertainment at the big show.

Betty Hutton is a tornado of energy performing "Doin' it the Hard Way" and Cass Daly, the gangly gal with the overbite, sings a rousing number, "You Can't Blame a Gal for Trying." Bing and Betty parody the Oscar winning song "Swinging on a Star" from Paramount's 1944 hit GOING MY WAY and Bing shares a scene with his four young sons Gary, Lin and twins Phillip and Dennis.

Variety posted a mixed review, finding the translation of weekly audio program to celluloid "stale," but they praised the vaudeville portion of the film. Eddie Bracken was singled out for "….playing the double role of a cowboy here, taking successively a beating by a bandit mob, a water dunking and some pies in his face, all constituting a nostalgic throwback to the good old Mack Sennett days and as hilarious a sequence as one will find in any film-comedy."

Admittedly, DUFFY'S TAVERN may not hold up well with most present-day viewers who haven't known the wonder of old-time radio and have little or no knowledge of Betty Hutton and Bing Crosby, let alone Cass Daley. Fans of movies from the 40's and Olt-Time radio buffs however, should find DUFFY'S TAVERN an elite place to meet many of their favorite old stars and have a great deal of fun along the way.
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7/10
Where the elite meet to eat
bkoganbing29 November 2004
Ed Gardiner, creator and star of popular radio show Duffy's Tavern took the act to the silver screen at the end of World War II and Paramount provided him with an all star cast in support. Every studio had those all star cast variety shows at some point during the World War II years, some studios made more than one. I must admit I'm a sucker for them, so there's no way I could give this a bad review. Especially with the

guest stars headed by America's number one star at the time, Bing Crosby.

The plots of these extravaganzas were always paper thin. In this case Victor Moore owns a record factory and World War II, material and price controls have left him without shellac needed to produce those 78 rpms. Also the war has stripped him of his labor force. But the guys are

back from the war, but Moore has no money to open the factory and no shellac. His recently discharged from the service employees are eating and drinking on credit at Duffy's Tavern, managed by inimitable and resourceful Archie played by Ed Gardiner.

Taverns have always been a great source for comedy and drama of all kinds throughout the centuries. You could go all the way back to Shakespeare with Sir John Falstaff and Prince Hal and their boon drinking companions. Or for drama, what better than Eugene O'Neill's The Iceman Cometh. Or in a lighter vein, William Saroyan's The Time of Your Life.

But Duffy's ain't that kind of a joint. Archie is part bartender, philosopher, with a touch of reprobate in him. We never see Mr. Duffy, but Archie reported in to him by phone several times during a given radio show. The bar is populated with a usual crew of characters who Archie comiserates with once a week. Archie's command of the English language is only equaled by Leo Gorcey's. I'm sure Gorcey must have studied under him.

So Ed Gardiner and Victor Moore set about to get the factory running and the men back to work. They have a master recording of Bing Crosby which should do the trick. A whole bunch of stars including Crosby, are staying at a hotel in New York where Moore's daughter Marjorie Reynolds is a switchboard operator.

If you can't figure the rest of this out, you ain't seen too many films from the forties.

Duffy's Tavern ran for years on radio. Ed Gardiner tried to take it to television, but it didn't succeed there. Strange because so many TV shows like Archie Bunker's Place, Jackie Gleason's Joe the Bartender sketches and George Carlin's show from a few years ago owe the format to what Gardiner did on radio.

A great place Duffy's Tavern, a place where Archie liked to say, "where the elite meet to eat."
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7/10
A classic radio series comes to Hollywood
mysterymoviegoer16 January 2014
The previous two reviewers do a very good job of detailing this film. It has greater historical value now than entertainment value because the type of humor --- radio and vaudeville--- are long gone and the stars like Ladd and Hutton and Lake and Crosby don't mean that much now. Leonard Maltin labeled it a Bomb. It's no masterpiece, but that's a gross injustice. Wonder which intern came up with that? Leonard needs to look at it himself. My guess is that it appealed to older viewers even at the time of its release 1945, the end of WWII. And it has a certain ethnic charm as well that will puzzle today's audiences. But a bomb? We are producing more bombs per season now than we were in 1945 with far less historic value. I shutter to think what Maltin's intern of 2075 will have to say about The Lone Ranger and Hangover 3. Worth a peek if you like old movies.
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7/10
Duffy's Tavern impressions
johnniedoo6 June 2014
To me, this is a classic movie for the end of war era. The first few reviewers cited the cavalcade type ones already. They need to be viewed and reviewed in the context of the time or the viewer misses the point. It is appropriate to note this, possibly, for people who do not realize there had been an all out world war for the past 4 to 6 yrs, depending on where one lived. mysterymoviegoer hit the nail on the head as far as I am concerned. I like to see the kinds of humor, the environments and attitudes that the movie portrays- not to mention the parade of stars and luminaries from the time. I did not see Maltin's review, gave up on it as a resource many yrs ago and hadn't even considered the intern angle. Nice to see another person take the time to record a most appropriate comment on this special kind of movie theme from a special time in history.
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6/10
Hollywood Canteen Hosted By A Tavern Barkeeper
DKosty12319 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Ed Gardner's Archie the barkeeper at Duffy's tavern was a classic radio personality when this film was made. The attempt at making this a more successful transition to movies is hampered by a couple of things. The best way I can describe it is by a comparison to the successful bar sit com years later - Cheers.

Archie is a bar keeper like Sam Malone (though Sam owns his bar most of the time while Archie doesn't). Archie's character was popular on the radio because of his voice. While the voice transfer's easily to film, his character is not developed for film. Yes, Archie is helpless with women, but really we need to know his background story. Sam Malone has a background as Sam 'Mayday" Malone who is a washed up former Major League Pitcher. Archie's only background is that he is a bar keeper. That is one big difference.

Archie's love interest appears to be a woman who already has a love of her own. This makes for a pretty dull script as it is very obvious Archie is just going to fail to get any traction and there is almost no Chemistry between Archie and her. The film kind of illustrates this by locking Archie in the fridge when she comes home. Meanwhile, there's plenty of static between Sam Malone & Diane or later Rebecca. A big difference that this film desperately needs in the first hour.

The best scene in that hour is when Archie and his buddy get mistaken for masseuses by a young Hollywood starlet and show how not to rub someone the right way. I admit for a G rated film, she has a good looking figure, and that is the most voltage this film gets. The saving the bar theme because it's broke is too thin a plot. Cheers does better than this when they open Season 11 with Rebecca accidentally setting fire to the bar. Duffy's Tavern lacks this fire.

The benefit skits are more than okay here, but they can't save this film from being mediocre. I am a Crosby fan and as usual he gets in his jabs at Hope here, while he is still a contract player at this studio. The ending of the film is a real let down too. If you want to see what is supposed to have inspired Cheers on TV, I supposed it's worth a trip to where the elite meet. It is obvious that this needed to be more developed as when you go from radio to film you need more than just the voice of Archie to put it over.
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5/10
Not the birth place of Duff Beer.
morrison-dylan-fan18 April 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Searching round for movies that I could give to my dad as presents during the Easter holiday,I was delighted to stumble upon a very rare sounding title featuring Bing Crosby,which led to me getting ready to pay a visit to Duffy's tavern for the first time.

The plot:

Being left to run the tavern as the Duffy family attempt to live the high life as socialites,bar tender Archie decides to take advantage advantage of the situation by allowing 14 of his friends to secretly work and sleep in the tavern,who Archie also secretly pays with money from the Duffy family.

After getting a phone call to notify him that Mrs Duffy has decided to pay a surprise visit to the tavern,Archie discovers to his horror that the tavern owes a huge amount of tax,thanks to Archie having secretly used the tax cash for his friends wages.With the axe hanging above the tavern's neck,Archie decides that the only option he has left is to quickly sort out a variety night,which will hopefully keep his dream tavern open.

View on the film:

Bringing lead actor/creator Ed Gardner's highly successful radio series to the big screen,the screenplay by Melvin Frank and Norman Panama is never able to fully reach the comedic opportunity offered in the plot,thanks to the writers allowing Archie's attempts to organise a show to fade into the background.Along with taking away feelings of excitement as Archie tries to sort out the event,this also leads to the title becoming a sketch movie which plods along,but never truly sparkles in the way it should.

Taking on bar hosting duties,Ed Gardner gives a wonderfully dry performance as Archie,with Gardner displaying a sleek line in wit,as Archie attempts to save the tavern,whilst also keeping his eyes on the ladies in a number of great scenes perfectly played by Gardner.Joining Gardner in this pretty star-packed cameoing film,Betty Hutton gives a fantastic over the top performance as an extremely pampered version of herself,whilst Bing Crosby gives the movie dollops of charm,as Archie gets ready to discover if he is about to make the tavern's last orders.
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3/10
See the film for the cameos...though most of them, frankly, are terrible!
planktonrules27 November 2020
Through most of the 1940s, "Duffy's Tavern" was a popular radio program. It was set in a bar and the show featured lots of famous guest stars stopping by the joint. Well, considering its success, it's not surprising that they'd make this film version as well as a 1950s television series.

It's pretty obvious that Paramount pulled out the stops to make this film, as the story called for many, many cameos from stars under contract with the studio. Bing Crosby (and his young sons), Alan Ladd, Dorothy Lamour, Veronica Lake, Betty Hutton, Paulette Goddard, Sonny Tufts, Eddie Bracken and several other stars appear in the film along side with the usual radio characters from the show.

The plot is scant and instead of getting into explaining it, suffice to say the bartender needs to raise money fast or he'll go to jail So he somehow convinces some stars in New York (all, oddly enough who are under contract with Paramount!) to put on a benefit show. Most of the acts are poor, but the singing of Betty Hutton and Cass Daley are something to hear....once! They both sing with as much subtlety as a stripper doing her act at a Baptist picnic!! Neither one so much sings as screams and somehow Daley managed to out-scream the queen of sing-screaming, Hutton! Unpleasant doesn't even begin to explain it!! Overall, a very slight film with some horrifyingly bad cameos.
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2/10
A shalaq of plot makes this a mixed bag of nuts, sadly only shells.
mark.waltz28 May 2020
Warning: Spoilers
The Paramount publicity department goes overboard to out-do rival MGM in their need to promote "more stars than there are in the tavern". This has an automatically dated concept with the radio series of the same name a basis for this comedy with occasional musical numbers that falls flatter than a happy hour drunk at 9 PM. It surrounds the titled bar and customers who frequent it, particularly the big idea seeker but lousy executioner of them, Victor Moore, the owner of a failing record company in debt needing to re-do the studio to bring the stars back in. This shell of a plot has Moore's daughter, Marjorie Reynolds, who happens to work in the switchboard department of Paramount, to get movie stars, still famous or now forgotten, to help them, and joining forces with recording studio employee Barry Sullivan to come to her father's aide. Along for the ride is Charles Cantor whose cartoon style voice begins to grate on the nerves after a while.

Taking some very familiar cliches and twisting them into glorious malapropisms ("Rome wasn't burnt in a day" for example), the script tries its best to be witty, but it ends up being just a 97 minute promotion for Paramount's contract players. Bing Crosby gets his usual snark in at the unseen Bob Hope, following up a scene where he is forced to hold a baby so a fan can get Dorothy Lamour's autograph, and Sullivan and Moore create havoc as they interrupt Paulette Goddard in the shower and Alan Ladd and Veronica Lake in rehearsing "O.S.S." There's more havoc with Betty Hutton getting an odd type of massage. When Victor Moore storms into her room and Hutton asks "Who's he?", I couldn't help but shout out "Your father from Star Spangled Rhythm!" Betty's a good sport as she gets kneaded like a big piece of raw Italian bread.

Without any real explanation of how it happens, the benefit is there, literally taking up 46 minutes of screen time. The songs and sketches are a mixed bag, with a jazzy tap dance to "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" the highlight. Another features Hutton spoofing "Lady in the Dark" with her frenetic personality (and Billy DeWolfe as her psychoanalyst) that lands, but others seem to be old vaudeville sketches pulled out of the trunk, complete with mothballs and bandages.

A sketch with Ladd, Lake and Howard da Silva would have gotten groans in 1945 and would cause major protest a decade later. A sketch fictionalizing Crosby's life seems rather self-serving and desperate. It doesn't seem at all like any kind of benefit, but it is the kind that Hollywood had been doing since it learned to talk, sing and dance. By the time the stars get to a delicious parody of "Swingin' on a Star" (a lot better than anything that had come before), you may be swingin' on your remote, ready to hit the stop button, just like audiences might have been doing in 1945 with the theater doors. It truly is over an hour of desperation with only about ten minutes I ever want to sit through again.
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