"Bill Miller [is] a struggling 1930s vaudeville singer whose small act could use a big-time boost. Help arrives in the form of fall-down-funny comic Ted Rogers. Teamed together, Miller and Rogers climb to the top of the showbiz heap, but as their success grows, so does Miller's ego. When Miller suddenly fires Rogers, he figures he's bound for stardom; what he gets is a tough lesson in what it means to be a class act, and the realization that his ex-partner wasn't just a 'stooge, ' he was a star. [Features] the song favorite Who's your little whozis? and a classic production number complete with rising curtains, falling sandbags and a flying comic-on-a-rope"--DVD sleeve.
"A conceited theatrical entertainer eventually realizes that his buffoonish partner is responsible for the success of the act."
""Bill Miller [is] a struggling 1930s vaudeville singer whose small act could use a big-time boost. Help arrives in the form of fall-down-funny comic Ted Rogers. Teamed together, Miller and Rogers climb to the top of the showbiz heap, but as their success grows, so does Miller's ego. When Miller suddenly fires Rogers, he figures he's bound for stardom; what he gets is a tough lesson in what it means to be a class act, and the realization that his ex-partner wasn't just a 'stooge, ' he was a star. [Features] the song favorite Who's your little whozis? and a classic production number complete with rising curtains, falling sandbags and a flying comic-on-a-rope"--DVD sleeve."@en
"A struggling vaudeville singer finds success when he teams up with a comedian. As their success grows, so does the singer's ego, and after firing his partner he realizes the comedian wasn't such a "stooge" after all."@en
"A struggling vaudeville singer finds success when he teams up with a comedian. As their success grows, so does the singer's ego, and after firing his partner he realizes the comedian wasn't such a "stooge" after all."
"Ever since Bill Miller teamed up with a manic comic, his singing act is suddenly big news, and he just can't admit that "the stooge" is the reason for his success."@en
"A 1930s vaudeville singer finds it difficult to accept that his new-found success is due to a zany comedian's joining his act."
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