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Jumping for Joy

1956 film by John Paddy Carstairs From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jumping for Joy
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Jumping for Joy is a 1956 British comedy film directed by John Paddy Carstairs and starring Frankie Howerd, Stanley Holloway, Joan Hickson and Lionel Jeffries.[1] It was written by Henry Blyth and Jack Davies. It tells of the comic adventures of an ex-worker at a greyhound racing track.

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Plot

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Willie Joy works at a greyhound track as a cleaner, which involves picking up droppings from the dog track between races. He is tricked into standing in the line of the lure and falls on it as it speeds past with the dogs chasing it. He is fired.

Breeder Bert Benton has a sick dog and sells it to Joy who takes it home. His landlady evicts him. He meets con-man "Captain" Jack Montague and together they hatch a plan to make money from the dog, whom they name "Lindy Lou". Nursed back to health, Lindy starts to prove herself at racing trials. Benton wants to buy her back.

Crooks use Joy as an unwitting collaborator in fixing races and placing large bets. They pass doped meat for the dog but Joy and Montague eat it themselves. The crooks find them asleep but cannot find the dog. They detach Montague's railway carriage home and move it onto an active railway line. When they awake they are told they are near Doncaster. The dog is rescued just before the carriage is hit by a train.

Lindy Lou wins the Gold Cup but only due to a distraction in crowd as Joy hits a policeman to ensue a whistle is blown. He is arrested and recognises the distinctive shoes of Haines of Scotland Yard as the ringleader of the crooks.

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Cast

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Production

Lindy Lou was actually a racing greyhound called Moyshna Queen from Wandsworth Stadium.[2]

The film led to Tony Wright being offered a contract at Rank.[3]

Joyce Gardner was a well known professional billiards player at the time, not an actress.

Critical reception

In contemporary reviews Variety called the film a "hilarious dog racing comedy,"[4] adding: "Frankie Howerd, popular TV and vaude comic here, gets the maximum of laughs out of a dismissed trackboy role"; Monthly Film Bulletin said "An inoffensively obvious and naive comedy, Jumping for Joy is enlivened by a somewhat macabre running joke about a myopic old woman driver and assured and pleasant performances by Frankie Howerd and Stanley Holloway."[5] Kine Weekly said "The picture smoothly follows through with its basic gags and, oddly enough, the more they are repeated the livelier they become."[6]

Halliwell's Film and Video Guide 2000 describes the film as a "totally predictable star comedy which needs livening up";[7] the Time Out Film Guide 2009 describes the film as "lame".[8] TV Guide called the film a "Sporadically funny comedy".[9]

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Musical score

The New York Times noted: "the delightful harmonica score in Jumping for Joy is provided by American expatriate Larry Adler".[10]

References

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