A veterinarian posing as a doctor teams with a singer and his friends as they struggle to save an upstate New York sanitarium with the help of a misfit racehorse.A veterinarian posing as a doctor teams with a singer and his friends as they struggle to save an upstate New York sanitarium with the help of a misfit racehorse.A veterinarian posing as a doctor teams with a singer and his friends as they struggle to save an upstate New York sanitarium with the help of a misfit racehorse.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 1 nomination total
Groucho Marx
- Dr. Hugo Z. Hackenbush
- (as The Marx Brothers)
Chico Marx
- Tony
- (as The Marx Brothers)
Harpo Marx
- Stuffy
- (as The Marx Brothers)
Sig Ruman
- Dr. Steinberg
- (as Sig Rumann)
Hooper Atchley
- Race Judge
- (uncredited)
King Baggot
- Race Track Official Starter
- (uncredited)
Kenny Baker
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
Vivian Barry
- Telephone Girl
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWith a running time of one hour and 50 minutes, this is the longest of The Marx Brothers' theatrical films.
- GoofsWhen Stuffy gets on the horse with the wagon, he is wearing a coat and dark trousers. As jockey he wears white pants and jockey shirt. While he could have lost the coat easy enough, there was no opportunity for him to change pants.
- Quotes
[Stuffy has grabbed some poison to drink]
Dr. Hackenbush: Hey, don't drink that poison! That's $4.00 an ounce!
- Alternate versionsAfter the film's opening two musical numbers featuring the songs "I'm Dr. Hackenbush" and "I've got a message from the man in the moon" were removed. This footage is now believed to have been destroyed.
- ConnectionsEdited into Hollywood: The Dream Factory (1972)
- SoundtracksOn Blue Venetian Waters
(1937) (uncredited)
Music by Bronislau Kaper & Walter Jurmann
Lyrics by Gus Kahn
Sung by Allan Jones
Danced by Vivien Fay and an Ensemble of Girls
Featured review
After this one, the quality fell off...dramatically.
This one has everything but Zeppo. Groucho and Chico work together like a well oiled insane asylum. The ice cream bit still makes me laugh and I've seen it upwards of twenty times. The timing is incredible. The examination room bit with Harpo ("Either this man is dead or my watch has stopped") is equally tight. There isn't a slow moment in the film.
What is unusual in this film is the big musical number with the African-American race track employees. Instead of people in black face or grotesque caricatures, real black singers and dancers are featured. Imagine seeing the Jitterbug fifteen years before white teens were performing it. It is not the only time the Marx Brothers have featured black musicians in one of their movies (At the Circus comes to mind)...
Margaret Dumont as Mrs Upjohn is wonderful. A Marx Brothers fan, like myself, tends to fall in love with the woman after many years. Her beauty and naivety eventually charm even the most cynical Grouchophile...
See it!
This one has everything but Zeppo. Groucho and Chico work together like a well oiled insane asylum. The ice cream bit still makes me laugh and I've seen it upwards of twenty times. The timing is incredible. The examination room bit with Harpo ("Either this man is dead or my watch has stopped") is equally tight. There isn't a slow moment in the film.
What is unusual in this film is the big musical number with the African-American race track employees. Instead of people in black face or grotesque caricatures, real black singers and dancers are featured. Imagine seeing the Jitterbug fifteen years before white teens were performing it. It is not the only time the Marx Brothers have featured black musicians in one of their movies (At the Circus comes to mind)...
Margaret Dumont as Mrs Upjohn is wonderful. A Marx Brothers fan, like myself, tends to fall in love with the woman after many years. Her beauty and naivety eventually charm even the most cynical Grouchophile...
See it!
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Details
Box office
- Budget
- $2,016,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 51 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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