Rating: NR
Genre:
Musical
Release Date: 09/30/2003
SubTitles: English/French/Espanol
Dubbed: English
Sound: DD1
Run Time: 125 Minutes
Flags: Suitable for Children
Distributor/Studio: Warner Home Video
Yankee Doodle Dandy is no more the true-life story of
George M. Cohan than
The Jolson Story was the unvarnished truth about
Al Jolson -- but who the heck cares?
Dandy has song, dance, pathos, pageantry, uproarious
comedy, and, best of all,
James Cagney at his Oscar-winning best. After several failed attempts to bring the life of legendary, flag-waving song-and-dance man
Cohan to the screen,
Warners scenarist
Robert Buckner opted for the anecdotal approach, unifying the film's largely unrelated episodes with a flashback framework. Summoned to the White House by
President Roosevelt, the aging
Cohan is encouraged to relate the events leading up to this momentous occasion. He recalls his birth on the Fourth of July, 1878; his early years as a cocky child performer in his family's vaudeville act; his decision to go out as a "single"; his sealed-with-a-handshake partnership with writer/producer
Sam Harris (
Richard Whorf); his first Broadway success, 1903's
Little Johnny Jones; his blissful marriage to winsome wife
Mary (a fictional amalgam of
Cohan's two wives, played by
Joan Leslie -- who, incredibly, was only 17 at the time); his patriotic civilian activities during World War I, culminating with his writing of that conflict's unofficial anthem
"Over There" (performed by
Nora Bayes, as played by
Frances Langford); the deaths of his sister,
Josie (played by
Cagney's real-life sister
Jeanne), his mother,
Nellie (
Rosemary DeCamp), and his father,
Jerry (
Walter Huston); his abortive attempt to retire; and his triumphant return to Broadway in
Rodgers & Hart's
I'd Rather Be Right.
His story told,
Cohan is surprised -- and profoundly moved -- when
FDR presents him with the Congressional Medal of Honor, the first such honor bestowed upon an entertainer. His eyes welling up with tears,
Cohan expresses his gratitude by invoking his old vaudeville curtain speech: "My mother thanks you, my father thanks you, my sister thanks you, and I thank you." Glossing over such unsavory moments in
Cohan's life as his bitter opposition of the formation of Actor's Equity -- not to mention
George M.'s intense hatred of
FDR! --
Yankee Doodle Dandy offers the
George M. Cohan that people in 1942 wanted to see (proof of the pudding was the film's five-million-dollar gross). And besides, the plot and its fabrications were secondary to those marvelous
Cohan melodies --
"Give My Regards to Broadway," "Harrigan," "Mary," "You're a Grand Old Flag," "45 Minutes from Broadway," and the title tune -- performed with brio by
Cagney (who modifies his own loose-limbed dancing style in order to imitate
Cohan's inimitable stiff-legged technique) and the rest of the spirited cast. Beyond its leading players, movie buffs will have a ball spotting the myriad of familiar character actors parading before the screen:
S.Z. Sakall,
George Tobias,
Walter Catlett,
George Barbier,
Eddie Foy Jr. (playing his own father),
Frank Faylen,
Minor Watson,
Tom Dugan,
John Hamilton, and on and on and on. In addition to
Cagney, music directors
Ray Heindorf and
Heinz Roemheld also won Oscars for their efforts.
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Average Review:

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A reviewer
from Fort Lauderdale, Florida
A Patriotic Musical Masterpiece.
Ranking no. 100 on the AFI's List of 100 Greatest Films, James Cagney proved he could do a lot more than play tough guy roles, and he did it. By singing and dancing his way to winning the Best Actor Oscar for his portrayal of Broadway star, George M. Cohan (1878-1942) in this musical biography about patriotism at a time when this country needed it most during wartime. Many of Cohan's songs are heard in the movie including Yankee Doodle Dandy, Grand Old Flag, and Over There. The movie would have looked a lot better if it had been shot in color instead of that dull, gritty black-and-white. However, the film still stands as a patriotic symbol even for today's generation.