Producer
Leonard Sillman's 1952 edition of his popular Broadway revue
New Faces was filmed just as it was staged, save for a wraparound fictional romantic story. The newly grafted plotline involves the efforts of director
Ronny Graham to stave off an angry creditor long enough to open his show. We occasionally cut away to the backstage intrigues, but never long enough to take anything away from
Sillman's talented cast of newcomers. The cast includes
Eartha Kitt, singing such standards-to-be as "C'est Ci Bon" and "Monotonous";
Robert Clary, doing a medley of his hit "I'm in Love With Miss Logan";
Alice Ghostley, belting forth a brace of satirical torch songs;
Paul Lynde (heavier than we're used to seeing him), offering his "safari" monologue and later participating in a screamingly funny
Death of a Salesman takeoff; and
Ronny Graham, performing an extended lampoon of either
Tennessee Williams or
Truman Capote (we aren't too sure; judge for yourself).
Carol Lawrence also makes her first film appearance herein. The Broadway production's biggest song hit, "Love Is a Simple Thing," is sung and danced to the oversaturation point. Among the many writers was a young fellow by the name of
Melvin Brooks (that's how he's billed). Its production flaws and budget shortcomings notwithstanding, the widescreen, full-color
New Faces offers a rare opportunity for a 1990s audience to see what a '50s-style musical revue really looked like to the opening-night crowd. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide