Warner Bros. made good use of its backlog of
Harry Warren/Al Dubin tunes in its 1951
Doris Day musical
Lullaby of Broadway. Day plays an American musical comedy star who comes back from a successful London engagement to visit her mother
Gladys George. A once-great Broadway star herself, George is now living in drunken poverty, but this fact has been carefully hidden from Day by lovable millionaire
S.Z. Sakall, who lives in the mansion once owned by Ms. George. Sakall arranges for George to pretend to still be the lady of the manor and to host a party in Day's honor. During the reception, love blooms between Day and Broadway hoofer
Gene Nelson. There are several breakups and reconciliations involving a number of characters before the big-money finale. While the musical highlights in
Lullaby of Broadway are consummately produced, the script (based on a story by
Earl Baldwin) occasionally falls flat, especially when striving for laughs. The best comic bit is a throwaway: Sakall enjoys a nocturnal bottle of beer, which in closeup is advertised as "The Beer That Made Cincinnati Famous" -- Cincinnati being, of course, Doris Day's home town. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide