'My Sister Eileen' is based on true incidents. Ruth and Eileen McKenney
were
sisters from a small town in Ohio who came to New York City: Ruth
intending
to become an author, Eileen hoping to be an actress. Although Ruth
McKenney
sold a few magazine pieces, her most successful work was her series of
fictionalised articles about the misadventures of her younger sister
Eileen.
The stories themselves have been out of print for many years, but they
provided the basis for a popular play, 'My Sister Eileen' (NOT written by
Ruth McKenney), which was a long-running Broadway hit and which has
remained
in print ever since. Ruth McKenney ironically gained fame and wealth from
a
play written by two other people, based on her stories.
The real Eileen McKenney ended badly. A pretty actress with more looks
than
talent, she married the overrated screenwriter Nathanael West and she died
alongside him in West's fatal car accident.
The 1942 film 'My Sister Eileen' is a faithful (and funny) version of the
Broadway hit, although it bears only slight resemblance to the real-life
exploits of sisters Ruth and Eileen McKenney (here renamed Sherwood).
Rather
unusually, this movie was made at Columbia Studios *during* the play's
Broadway run. Two of the best performances here are given by actors
repeating their stage roles: Gordon Jones as an obsessive football player
named 'The Wreck', and Richard Quine as nice young man Frank Lippincott,
who
fancies Eileen.
Small-town sisters Ruth and Eileen come to the big city. Ruth (Rosalind
Russell) is smart, cynical, and doesn't need a man. Eileen (Janet Blair)
is
naive and pretty and attracts all the lads. Because the sisters haven't
got
much money, the only place they can afford is a basement flat in Greenwich
Village, owned by a crooked landlord named Appopolous (George Tobias, not
up
to his usual high standard here). The flat is directly above a subway
tunnel, where construction workers are blasting with dynamite: at regular
intervals, the whole building shakes. Worse luck, the previous tenant was
a
young lady who (ahem!) rented by the hour, and so Ruth and Eileen are
constantly plagued with male visitors who assume that their apartment is
still, erm, open for business. Ruth and Eileen have no end of
misadventures
while trying to start their careers as, respectively, a journalist and an
actress.
BIG SPOILER STARTING NOW. The last gag in this movie is absolutely
hilarious. All through the film, we hear the sounds of the subway navvies
directly under Ruth and Eileen's apartment. At the very end of this movie,
a
jackhammer pokes up through the floor and three construction workers
emerge.
When they pull off their helmets, we see that they're Moe, Larry and
Curly!
Moe lambastes his two 'knucklehead' workmates while the soundtrack starts
playing the 'Three Stooges' theme tune!
In 1953, Betty Comden and Adolph Green approached Rosalind Russell to star
in a Broadway musical version of 'My Sister Eileen' with music by Leonard
Bernstein, to be called 'Wonderful Town'. (The original title wasn't
legally
available.) I really dislike 'Wonderful Town': it has a score which I
consider extremely pretentious. Rosalind Russell, to her credit, had no
illusions about her own song-and-dance abilities. 'Wonderful Town' was
never
filmed, because Columbia had retained the musical rights ... and they made
their OWN musical version in 1955, with tunes by Jule Styne that are
vastly
better than anything "Lenny" Bernstein ever wrote. Interestingly, Richard
Quine (who hed acted in the original film and the Broadway cast) directed
the musical remake, and his role as Frank Lippincott was taken over by Bob
Fosse, giving his best performance as an actor and choreographing some
snappy dance numbers as well. I strongly recommend both film versions of
'My
Sister Eileen', which is more than I can say for the overrated 'Wonderful
Town'. I'll rate this 1942 version 9 points out of 10. Well
done!
6 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- an original if ever there was one, 20 August 2007
Author:
Daryl Chin (lqualls-dchin) from Brooklyn, New York
Rosalind Russell was one of the finest comediennes in the American
movies, and this in a period which saw the likes of Claudette Colbert,
Carole Lombard, Jean Arthur, Ginger Rogers, Irene Dunne, Katharine
Hepburn and others. Russell was a rarity: though all the others often
played dizzy women, in her comedies, Russell always played smart,
hard-edged career women (the exception was her first major comedy role,
as the catty Sylvia in THE WOMEN).
At a time when HANNAH TAKES THE STAIRS is set to open, with its
lackadaisical heroine pursuing a writing career as she tries to make
sense of her romantic entanglements, it behooves us to remember MY
SISTER EILEEN, which (when it was filmed in 1942) is the prototype, as
the two Sherwood sisters (Ruth, played by Rosalind Russell, and her
younger sister Eileen, played by Janet Blair) come to New York City to
try their hands at writing (for Ruth) and acting (for Eileen). The
slapstick annoyances, the charmingly maladroit Greenwich Village
denizens (part ethnic, part "bohemian"), the stereotypical romantic
encounters, all make for a charming entertainment. In the wake of the
sexual frankness of HANNAH TAKES THE STAIRS, MY SISTER EILEEN might
seem dated, but it's a lovely reminder of the wit and the humor of the
generation growing up during World War II, when women were (again)
finding new possibilities in the workplace, but still had the same
problems finding proper dates.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- WELL it just can't be TRUE that Nobody has Reviewed this Gem!, 20 August 2007
Author:
Enrique Sanchez from Miami, FL
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I saw it this evening and just had to say something. Of course, this
play must have been fun...and at times you realize that the use of very
few settings is kind of familiar. And so it had been a play and some of
the supporting characters were in the original Broadway play.
But this is Rosalind's vehicle all the way. And she was rightfully
nominated for an Oscar. It is the kind of performance that just
sparkles. Her timing is positively impeccable. Everything she ever did
had that unmistakable charm and flawless comedic timing that always
makes you wonder if there is any other way to play a scene! There are
many romps in this lively comedy and none is played to staleness. Not
even the grand finale which I really shouldn't spoil because it came
out of left field for me! I would have never ever expected it to end
like this! Suffice it to say that I was literally jolted - as if
something that didn't belong suddenly intruded into the movie. But it
was a fitting if not slapstick ending that will bring a chuckle and a
gasp to everyone.
See it! It's fun!
6 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Delightful comedy from B'way stage hit...Russell at her best..., 20 August 2007
Author:
Neil Doyle from U.S.A.
ROSALIND RUSSELL was always at her best in comedies and here she had a
role that got her an Oscar nomination for Best Actress in 1942--and
it's easy to see why. She's downright hilarious as the gal from Ohio
with writing ambitions and a pretty blonde sister (JANET BLAIR) with a
penchant for attracting men and trouble.
All the wacky situations stem from their Greenwich Village basement
apartment which seems to have more visitors than Grand Central Station.
It's all exaggerated fluff, but it works, thanks to a fine cast and
sterling performances.
RICHARD QUINE and GORDON JONES do repeats of their Broadway roles, and
DONALD MacBRIDE as a policeman who wants quiet on his route is
hilarious. JUNE HAVOC makes a brief appearance as a medium who used to
live in the girls' apartment. GEORGE TOBIAS, as the opportunistic
landlord with the Greek accent, is at his funniest in a colorful
supporting role.
My favorite moment is the conga sequence with Russell and Blair trying
to get rid of sailors who don't speak a word of English, creating a
disturbance that lands Blair in jail. Janet Blair is pleasant as the
blonde bombshell but it's Russell who milks the most out of her role
and gets all the laughs. She's terrific.
BRIAN AHERNE does what he can with the role of the talkative editor,
but it's not much of a part. Still, he adds a certain debonair charm to
the role.
Summing up: Notable chiefly as a terrific vehicle for Russell's unique
brand of comic talent.
2 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Several big laughs, and Russell is a real peach..., 2 July 2008
Author:
moonspinner55 from redlands, ca
Ruth McKenney's series of autobiographical articles about siblings from
Columbus, Ohio relocated to wacky Greenwich Village was initially
turned into a play before this movie version (it later went back to the
stage as the musical "Wonderful Town", winning a Tony award for
Rosalind Russell), and in 1955 was filmed again as "My Sister Eileen"
with the songs. Russell appears here as Ruth (the smart, savvy sister
who longs to be a writer) and Janet Blair is sister Eileen (the pretty
blonde with hopes of becoming an actress). They move into the noisiest
hovel in New York, with a steady stream of foot-traffic and neighbors
who barge in without knocking. Some of these characters are colorful,
though the comic craziness is pitched a little high, and everyone
overacts (cheerfully). Russell (who got an Oscar nomination for her
dryly bemused performance) sports an awful potato-chip hairstyle which
must have been all the rage in 1942; her double takes and facial
exaggerations are often very funny, and she plays well off Blair (they
take turns playing the jester and the straight-face). Is it ridiculous
and over-the-top? Absolutely. But when the results are this friendly,
it's useless to complain. **1/2 from ****
Is that a Streetsweeper in My Livingroom, 4 July 2008
Author:
dougdoepke from Claremont,USA
It's a circus, but you don't need an admission ticket. You can even
peek in from the street and catch all the antics on your way to work.
It's Ruth and Eileen's sub-level flat, and rents for only $48 a month
with open grillwork onto a chaotic Greenwich Village street scene. Are
these two ambitious Mid-western sisters ready for a pro-football player
who sleeps over, a fast-talking landlord who paints like a Dodo bird,
and a mysterious stranger who walks in and refuses to leave, Then
there's the battalion of Portuguese naval cadets who mistake the flat
for a dance studio. It's all part of this wacky, fast-paced take on
Life in the Big City.
It's all good, innocent fun of course with a tempo that seldom falters,
and when things do slow, there's always an underground jolt to mix it
up again. Naturally, Rosalind Russell as the caustic older sister gets
all the good throw-away lines, while Janet Blair as Eileen gets all the
wolf whistles. Then there's the assorted characters-- Gordon Jone's
trademark good-natured galoot, George Tobias' fractured ethnic type,
and Chick Chandler's silent stranger more creepy than humorous. And, of
course, no urban scene of the day would be complete without the
bulldog-face of Donald McBride as the ever cranky cop. Together, they
turn the flat into a stopover on the way to the funny farm. I expect
more than a few Mid-Westerners packed up for New York hoping to get a
share of madcap city life.
On a more serious note, the movie was made at a time when the "common
touch" was being celebrated in popular culture. After all, it would
take a combined national effort to defeat the Axis powers. So, it's not
surprising that many movies celebrated the America of the "melting
pot", complete with ethnic types, blue-collar characters, and frequent
references to Brooklyn, the symbol of the melding.
Anyway, it's still a fun movie even if some skits do strain a bit. I
guess the moral is that no city is too big for the talented. And
especially, for the shapely. Then too, make sure to stick around for a
very last scene that could not be more inspired or appropriate.
6 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :- Greenwich Village As It Used To Be, 20 August 2007
Author:
David (Handlinghandel) from NY, NY
Though this appears to have been filmed entirely on a sound stage, the
feel of the original stories comes through. This is the Village as it
has been as long as I've lived here.
Please note: I was not born when this movie came out. But maybe my
mother, a writer, saw it and decided ti was for her. When I was a child
we lived a few blocks from where the stories were set. And for the last
decades, I have lived maybe three blocks from there. And how it has
changed! And how much for the worse: Rich people, high rents and buying
(who'd heard of buying an apartment in 1942?!) Noisy clubs ...
Janet Blair is fine as the title character. Rosalind Russell is very
good as her sister Ruth. (The real Ruth, who wrote the stories, married
Nathanael West and died tragically at a young age.) Russell is sort of
like her Sylvia Fowler character in "The Women." But we can see hints
of the broad style that was to come and was to sink her by the time of
"Auntie Mame." George Tobias is fun as the girls' fast-talking artistic
landlord. Without knowing it at the time, I rented my first Manhattan
apartment from the man on whom this character was based. That was 30
years later.
Brian Ahern is OK as the male lead. He's a little stuffy, but he's
meant to be. In fact, his character is insufferable. Why Ruth is drawn
to him is not made clear.
I loved seeing the organ grinder near the end. I remember them on
nearby Waverly Place a decade later when I was a small child! This
gives a better view of the Village than any other commercial movie I
can think of. It's fun and definitely is recommended..
0 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- early comedy for Ros Russell, 2 July 2008
Author:
ksf-2 from southwest US
Abner! Abner! yup, that's George Tobias from "Bewitched" behind the wig
and over-sized mustache playing the bushy/pushy artist and landlord in
this first film version of "My Sister Eileen". Rosalind Russell and
Janel Blair are sisters who come from Ohio to the big city to find fame
and fortune in New York. There are some clever lines, mostly given to
Russell, but it must be the direction of Alexander Hall holding this
back. The Three Stooges make an appearance, and a very flat-line Brian
Aherne. He keeps stepping out of the woodwork to tell Ruth (Russell)
that her stories will or will not be published. Viewers will recognize
Donald MacBride as the neighborhood cop, trying to keep things under
control. Gordon Jones is the out of work muscle guy from upstairs,
married of course, since we're well into the Hays Code by this time. He
always seems to play the wrestler, the truck driver, and people named
"Tex". The girls have many adventures, but the Portuguese navy is
involved, and for some reason, they put Eileen (Blair) in jail, which
doesn't really make sense, but you have to buy into it. It probably
made more sense before it was all whitewashed for the audience. The
basic story must have good footings, since the film has been remade,
and it was even turned into a TV show in the 1960s. Janet Blair, who
had the least experience in films at the time, turns in the best acting
performance. Interesting note- Frank Quine, who had played Lippincott
in the 1942 film version, directed the 1955 remake starring Janet
Leigh, Jack Lemmon, and Betty Garrett. Haven't seen that one yet, but
it must have been pretty good, since that one made it to video. and the
1955 version was a musical! one odd connection - the 42 version has
George Tobias, and the 1955 version has Dick York, both would end up on
the TV show "Bewitched"
2 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- My Sister Eileen- Family Joke **1/2, 20 August 2007
Author:
edwagreen from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Rosalind Russell received a best actress nomination for playing Ruth
Sherwood, a writer from Columbus, Ohio, who comes to the big apple with
her sister Eileen.(Janet Blair). Up against the winner (Greer Garson
for Mrs. Miniver) or Bette Davis (Now, Voyager),Russell had little
chance in winning and she didn't.
The film deals with the lunatic situations brought about when the
sisters arrive here. Settling in a basement apartment which should have
been condemned, the two encounter all sorts of strange people coming in
and out of the apartment. We have a crazy landlord, (George Tobias) a
publisher (Brian Aherne) who lacked any comic talent here, the former
tenant, a seer (June Havoc) in a brief performance, neighbors who want
the husband to sleep in the kitchen as her mother is coming, a
suspicious policeman and Portuguese merchant marines who cause havoc as
well.
Luckily, the film ends when The 3 Stooges drill a hole in the floor. By
that time, I had it.
Rosalind Russell proved that she had excellent comic timing and Janet
Blair is good as well, but the written material they were given leaves
a lot to be desired.
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My Sister Eileen (1942)
22 out of 30 people found the following comment useful :-

Roz is riotously funny, 20 January 2003
Author: F Gwynplaine MacIntyre (Borroloola@earthlink.net) from Minffordd, North Wales
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
'My Sister Eileen' is based on true incidents. Ruth and Eileen McKenney were sisters from a small town in Ohio who came to New York City: Ruth intending to become an author, Eileen hoping to be an actress. Although Ruth McKenney sold a few magazine pieces, her most successful work was her series of fictionalised articles about the misadventures of her younger sister Eileen. The stories themselves have been out of print for many years, but they provided the basis for a popular play, 'My Sister Eileen' (NOT written by Ruth McKenney), which was a long-running Broadway hit and which has remained in print ever since. Ruth McKenney ironically gained fame and wealth from a play written by two other people, based on her stories.
The real Eileen McKenney ended badly. A pretty actress with more looks than talent, she married the overrated screenwriter Nathanael West and she died alongside him in West's fatal car accident.
The 1942 film 'My Sister Eileen' is a faithful (and funny) version of the Broadway hit, although it bears only slight resemblance to the real-life exploits of sisters Ruth and Eileen McKenney (here renamed Sherwood). Rather unusually, this movie was made at Columbia Studios *during* the play's Broadway run. Two of the best performances here are given by actors repeating their stage roles: Gordon Jones as an obsessive football player named 'The Wreck', and Richard Quine as nice young man Frank Lippincott, who fancies Eileen.
Small-town sisters Ruth and Eileen come to the big city. Ruth (Rosalind Russell) is smart, cynical, and doesn't need a man. Eileen (Janet Blair) is naive and pretty and attracts all the lads. Because the sisters haven't got much money, the only place they can afford is a basement flat in Greenwich Village, owned by a crooked landlord named Appopolous (George Tobias, not up to his usual high standard here). The flat is directly above a subway tunnel, where construction workers are blasting with dynamite: at regular intervals, the whole building shakes. Worse luck, the previous tenant was a young lady who (ahem!) rented by the hour, and so Ruth and Eileen are constantly plagued with male visitors who assume that their apartment is still, erm, open for business. Ruth and Eileen have no end of misadventures while trying to start their careers as, respectively, a journalist and an actress.
BIG SPOILER STARTING NOW. The last gag in this movie is absolutely hilarious. All through the film, we hear the sounds of the subway navvies directly under Ruth and Eileen's apartment. At the very end of this movie, a jackhammer pokes up through the floor and three construction workers emerge. When they pull off their helmets, we see that they're Moe, Larry and Curly! Moe lambastes his two 'knucklehead' workmates while the soundtrack starts playing the 'Three Stooges' theme tune!
In 1953, Betty Comden and Adolph Green approached Rosalind Russell to star in a Broadway musical version of 'My Sister Eileen' with music by Leonard Bernstein, to be called 'Wonderful Town'. (The original title wasn't legally available.) I really dislike 'Wonderful Town': it has a score which I consider extremely pretentious. Rosalind Russell, to her credit, had no illusions about her own song-and-dance abilities. 'Wonderful Town' was never filmed, because Columbia had retained the musical rights ... and they made their OWN musical version in 1955, with tunes by Jule Styne that are vastly better than anything "Lenny" Bernstein ever wrote. Interestingly, Richard Quine (who hed acted in the original film and the Broadway cast) directed the musical remake, and his role as Frank Lippincott was taken over by Bob Fosse, giving his best performance as an actor and choreographing some snappy dance numbers as well. I strongly recommend both film versions of 'My Sister Eileen', which is more than I can say for the overrated 'Wonderful Town'. I'll rate this 1942 version 9 points out of 10. Well done!
6 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-

an original if ever there was one, 20 August 2007
Author: Daryl Chin (lqualls-dchin) from Brooklyn, New York
Rosalind Russell was one of the finest comediennes in the American movies, and this in a period which saw the likes of Claudette Colbert, Carole Lombard, Jean Arthur, Ginger Rogers, Irene Dunne, Katharine Hepburn and others. Russell was a rarity: though all the others often played dizzy women, in her comedies, Russell always played smart, hard-edged career women (the exception was her first major comedy role, as the catty Sylvia in THE WOMEN).
At a time when HANNAH TAKES THE STAIRS is set to open, with its lackadaisical heroine pursuing a writing career as she tries to make sense of her romantic entanglements, it behooves us to remember MY SISTER EILEEN, which (when it was filmed in 1942) is the prototype, as the two Sherwood sisters (Ruth, played by Rosalind Russell, and her younger sister Eileen, played by Janet Blair) come to New York City to try their hands at writing (for Ruth) and acting (for Eileen). The slapstick annoyances, the charmingly maladroit Greenwich Village denizens (part ethnic, part "bohemian"), the stereotypical romantic encounters, all make for a charming entertainment. In the wake of the sexual frankness of HANNAH TAKES THE STAIRS, MY SISTER EILEEN might seem dated, but it's a lovely reminder of the wit and the humor of the generation growing up during World War II, when women were (again) finding new possibilities in the workplace, but still had the same problems finding proper dates.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

WELL it just can't be TRUE that Nobody has Reviewed this Gem!, 20 August 2007
Author: Enrique Sanchez from Miami, FL
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I saw it this evening and just had to say something. Of course, this play must have been fun...and at times you realize that the use of very few settings is kind of familiar. And so it had been a play and some of the supporting characters were in the original Broadway play.
But this is Rosalind's vehicle all the way. And she was rightfully nominated for an Oscar. It is the kind of performance that just sparkles. Her timing is positively impeccable. Everything she ever did had that unmistakable charm and flawless comedic timing that always makes you wonder if there is any other way to play a scene! There are many romps in this lively comedy and none is played to staleness. Not even the grand finale which I really shouldn't spoil because it came out of left field for me! I would have never ever expected it to end like this! Suffice it to say that I was literally jolted - as if something that didn't belong suddenly intruded into the movie. But it was a fitting if not slapstick ending that will bring a chuckle and a gasp to everyone.
See it! It's fun!
6 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

Delightful comedy from B'way stage hit...Russell at her best..., 20 August 2007
Author: Neil Doyle from U.S.A.
ROSALIND RUSSELL was always at her best in comedies and here she had a role that got her an Oscar nomination for Best Actress in 1942--and it's easy to see why. She's downright hilarious as the gal from Ohio with writing ambitions and a pretty blonde sister (JANET BLAIR) with a penchant for attracting men and trouble.
All the wacky situations stem from their Greenwich Village basement apartment which seems to have more visitors than Grand Central Station. It's all exaggerated fluff, but it works, thanks to a fine cast and sterling performances.
RICHARD QUINE and GORDON JONES do repeats of their Broadway roles, and DONALD MacBRIDE as a policeman who wants quiet on his route is hilarious. JUNE HAVOC makes a brief appearance as a medium who used to live in the girls' apartment. GEORGE TOBIAS, as the opportunistic landlord with the Greek accent, is at his funniest in a colorful supporting role.
My favorite moment is the conga sequence with Russell and Blair trying to get rid of sailors who don't speak a word of English, creating a disturbance that lands Blair in jail. Janet Blair is pleasant as the blonde bombshell but it's Russell who milks the most out of her role and gets all the laughs. She's terrific.
BRIAN AHERNE does what he can with the role of the talkative editor, but it's not much of a part. Still, he adds a certain debonair charm to the role.
Summing up: Notable chiefly as a terrific vehicle for Russell's unique brand of comic talent.
2 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

Several big laughs, and Russell is a real peach..., 2 July 2008
Author: moonspinner55 from redlands, ca
Ruth McKenney's series of autobiographical articles about siblings from Columbus, Ohio relocated to wacky Greenwich Village was initially turned into a play before this movie version (it later went back to the stage as the musical "Wonderful Town", winning a Tony award for Rosalind Russell), and in 1955 was filmed again as "My Sister Eileen" with the songs. Russell appears here as Ruth (the smart, savvy sister who longs to be a writer) and Janet Blair is sister Eileen (the pretty blonde with hopes of becoming an actress). They move into the noisiest hovel in New York, with a steady stream of foot-traffic and neighbors who barge in without knocking. Some of these characters are colorful, though the comic craziness is pitched a little high, and everyone overacts (cheerfully). Russell (who got an Oscar nomination for her dryly bemused performance) sports an awful potato-chip hairstyle which must have been all the rage in 1942; her double takes and facial exaggerations are often very funny, and she plays well off Blair (they take turns playing the jester and the straight-face). Is it ridiculous and over-the-top? Absolutely. But when the results are this friendly, it's useless to complain. **1/2 from ****
Is that a Streetsweeper in My Livingroom, 4 July 2008

Author: dougdoepke from Claremont,USA
It's a circus, but you don't need an admission ticket. You can even peek in from the street and catch all the antics on your way to work. It's Ruth and Eileen's sub-level flat, and rents for only $48 a month with open grillwork onto a chaotic Greenwich Village street scene. Are these two ambitious Mid-western sisters ready for a pro-football player who sleeps over, a fast-talking landlord who paints like a Dodo bird, and a mysterious stranger who walks in and refuses to leave, Then there's the battalion of Portuguese naval cadets who mistake the flat for a dance studio. It's all part of this wacky, fast-paced take on Life in the Big City.
It's all good, innocent fun of course with a tempo that seldom falters, and when things do slow, there's always an underground jolt to mix it up again. Naturally, Rosalind Russell as the caustic older sister gets all the good throw-away lines, while Janet Blair as Eileen gets all the wolf whistles. Then there's the assorted characters-- Gordon Jone's trademark good-natured galoot, George Tobias' fractured ethnic type, and Chick Chandler's silent stranger more creepy than humorous. And, of course, no urban scene of the day would be complete without the bulldog-face of Donald McBride as the ever cranky cop. Together, they turn the flat into a stopover on the way to the funny farm. I expect more than a few Mid-Westerners packed up for New York hoping to get a share of madcap city life.
On a more serious note, the movie was made at a time when the "common touch" was being celebrated in popular culture. After all, it would take a combined national effort to defeat the Axis powers. So, it's not surprising that many movies celebrated the America of the "melting pot", complete with ethnic types, blue-collar characters, and frequent references to Brooklyn, the symbol of the melding.
Anyway, it's still a fun movie even if some skits do strain a bit. I guess the moral is that no city is too big for the talented. And especially, for the shapely. Then too, make sure to stick around for a very last scene that could not be more inspired or appropriate.
6 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :-

Greenwich Village As It Used To Be, 20 August 2007
Author: David (Handlinghandel) from NY, NY
Though this appears to have been filmed entirely on a sound stage, the feel of the original stories comes through. This is the Village as it has been as long as I've lived here.
Please note: I was not born when this movie came out. But maybe my mother, a writer, saw it and decided ti was for her. When I was a child we lived a few blocks from where the stories were set. And for the last decades, I have lived maybe three blocks from there. And how it has changed! And how much for the worse: Rich people, high rents and buying (who'd heard of buying an apartment in 1942?!) Noisy clubs ...
Janet Blair is fine as the title character. Rosalind Russell is very good as her sister Ruth. (The real Ruth, who wrote the stories, married Nathanael West and died tragically at a young age.) Russell is sort of like her Sylvia Fowler character in "The Women." But we can see hints of the broad style that was to come and was to sink her by the time of "Auntie Mame." George Tobias is fun as the girls' fast-talking artistic landlord. Without knowing it at the time, I rented my first Manhattan apartment from the man on whom this character was based. That was 30 years later.
Brian Ahern is OK as the male lead. He's a little stuffy, but he's meant to be. In fact, his character is insufferable. Why Ruth is drawn to him is not made clear.
I loved seeing the organ grinder near the end. I remember them on nearby Waverly Place a decade later when I was a small child! This gives a better view of the Village than any other commercial movie I can think of. It's fun and definitely is recommended..
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early comedy for Ros Russell, 2 July 2008
Author: ksf-2 from southwest US
Abner! Abner! yup, that's George Tobias from "Bewitched" behind the wig and over-sized mustache playing the bushy/pushy artist and landlord in this first film version of "My Sister Eileen". Rosalind Russell and Janel Blair are sisters who come from Ohio to the big city to find fame and fortune in New York. There are some clever lines, mostly given to Russell, but it must be the direction of Alexander Hall holding this back. The Three Stooges make an appearance, and a very flat-line Brian Aherne. He keeps stepping out of the woodwork to tell Ruth (Russell) that her stories will or will not be published. Viewers will recognize Donald MacBride as the neighborhood cop, trying to keep things under control. Gordon Jones is the out of work muscle guy from upstairs, married of course, since we're well into the Hays Code by this time. He always seems to play the wrestler, the truck driver, and people named "Tex". The girls have many adventures, but the Portuguese navy is involved, and for some reason, they put Eileen (Blair) in jail, which doesn't really make sense, but you have to buy into it. It probably made more sense before it was all whitewashed for the audience. The basic story must have good footings, since the film has been remade, and it was even turned into a TV show in the 1960s. Janet Blair, who had the least experience in films at the time, turns in the best acting performance. Interesting note- Frank Quine, who had played Lippincott in the 1942 film version, directed the 1955 remake starring Janet Leigh, Jack Lemmon, and Betty Garrett. Haven't seen that one yet, but it must have been pretty good, since that one made it to video. and the 1955 version was a musical! one odd connection - the 42 version has George Tobias, and the 1955 version has Dick York, both would end up on the TV show "Bewitched"
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My Sister Eileen- Family Joke **1/2, 20 August 2007
Author: edwagreen from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Rosalind Russell received a best actress nomination for playing Ruth Sherwood, a writer from Columbus, Ohio, who comes to the big apple with her sister Eileen.(Janet Blair). Up against the winner (Greer Garson for Mrs. Miniver) or Bette Davis (Now, Voyager),Russell had little chance in winning and she didn't.
The film deals with the lunatic situations brought about when the sisters arrive here. Settling in a basement apartment which should have been condemned, the two encounter all sorts of strange people coming in and out of the apartment. We have a crazy landlord, (George Tobias) a publisher (Brian Aherne) who lacked any comic talent here, the former tenant, a seer (June Havoc) in a brief performance, neighbors who want the husband to sleep in the kitchen as her mother is coming, a suspicious policeman and Portuguese merchant marines who cause havoc as well.
Luckily, the film ends when The 3 Stooges drill a hole in the floor. By that time, I had it.
Rosalind Russell proved that she had excellent comic timing and Janet Blair is good as well, but the written material they were given leaves a lot to be desired.
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