Everythings Rosie
6.4 /10 1 Votes
Director Clyde Bruckman Story by Al Boasberg Duration Language English | 6.2/10 Genre Comedy, Romance Producer William LeBaron Country United States | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Release date May 22, 1931 (1931-05-22) ( Premiere-New York City)
June 13, 1931 (1931-06-13) (U.S.) Writer Al Boasberg (by), Tim Whelan (screen play), Al Boasberg (dialogue), Ralph Spence (dialogue) Cast Robert Woolsey (Dr. J. Dockweiler Droop), Anita Louise (Rosie Droop), John Darrow (Billy Lowe), Florence Roberts (Mrs. Lowe), Clifford Dempsey (Sheriff Hopkins), Lita Chevret (Madeline Van Dorn)Similar movies Drama in the Desert: The Sights and Sounds of Burning Man , AquaBurn , Dust Devils , Pinocchio , The African Dodger , The English Patient |
A medicine-show quack (Robert Woolsey) meets his adopted daughters (Anita Louise) boyfriends (John Darrow) parents.
Contents

Everythings Rosie is a 1931 slapstick comedy film directed by Clyde Bruckman, from a screenplay by Ralph Spence, Tim Whelan, and Al Boasberg, based on a story by Boasberg. Although the screenplay was credited as original, it bore a striking resemblance to a 1923 play which starred W.C. Fields, Poppy. The film starred Robert Woolsey, one-half of the comedy team of Wheeler & Woolsey, and was an attempt by RKO Radio Pictures to capitalize on the popularity of the comedy duo, having each of the team star in their own solo films. The film also starred Anita Louise and John Darrow, but was a critical failure, although it did manage not to lose money in a year when most RKO films did exactly that.

A carnival huckster and his 17-year-old foster daughter try to be accepted by the townspeople when she and a handsome lad fall in love.
Plot
Dr. J. Dockweiler Droop (Robert Woolsey) is a carnival charlatan, scamming local shills out of their hard earned money. He adopted Rosie (Anita Louise) when she was three, and has raised her to become a pretty young woman, who is just as good an operator as her adoptive father is. As they pass through a small town, Rosie falls in love with Billy Lowe (John Darrow), and pleads with Dockweiler to leave the carnival life and settle down. Dockweiler agrees, and the two leave the carnival.
To support them, Dockweiler becomes partners with a jewelry store owner, Al Oberdorf (Alfred James), who is on the verge of bankruptcy. Due to Dockweilers sales skills, he saves the store from failure. He has also been spending his time convincing the gullible townspeople that he is actually a European noblemen. While Rosie is in love with Billy, she finds out that he is engaged to a snobbish socialite, Madeline Van Dorn (Lita Chevret). Heartbroken, when Billy invites her to his birthday, she agrees to go, along with Dockweiler. While at the party, Dockweiler decides to get back at the townspeople who have heartbroken his daughter, and runs a crooked shell game, bilking the locals of large amounts of cash. When Rosie discovers that Billy has true feelings for her, and intends to marry her, she asks Dockweiler to lose back the money he has won. He agrees, but before the evening is out, the Sheriff (Clifford Dempsey) arrives and asks him to leave town for running a dishonest game.
Before they can leave, however, the jewelry store is robbed, and suspicion falls on Dockweiler who is arrested for the theft. He escapes from the jail, and is leaving town with Rosie, when the Sheriff and Billy track them down to let them know that the real jewel thieves have been apprehended. Dockweiler understands that he will never fit in with the local gentry, so, now assured of Rosies happiness with Billy, bids them adieu and departs.
Cast
(Cast list as per AFI database)
Similar Movies
Robert Woolsey appears in Everythings Rosie and Cracked Nuts. Robert Woolsey appears in Everythings Rosie and Hook - Line and Sinker. Laugh and Get Rich (1931). Robert Woolsey appears in Everythings Rosie and The Cuckoos. Robert Woolsey appears in Everythings Rosie and So This Is Africa.
Reception
The film was routinely panned by critics. Mordaunt Hall, of The New York Times came right to the point in his review, "One of the cinemas minor indiscretions, an item entitled "Everythings Rosie," was inflicted last evening on a small audience at the Globe which found it as lacking in wit as in intelligence and ordinary good taste." Silver Screen magazine gave it a "fair" rating, stating, "Robert Woolsey without Bert Wheeler is nothing to turn cartsprings about" Screenland was slightly more generous, saying that Woolsey in his solo performance "... tickles the customer with this one."
The film made a slight profit of $35,000.
References
Everythings Rosie WikipediaEverythings Rosie IMDb Everythings Rosie themoviedb.org