The story of a 19th century English music hall (vaudeville) performer and life behind the scenes.The story of a 19th century English music hall (vaudeville) performer and life behind the scenes.The story of a 19th century English music hall (vaudeville) performer and life behind the scenes.
Bill Shine
- Mogador Stage Manager
- (as Billy Shine)
Andreas Malandrinos
- Gatti
- (as Andrea Malandrinos)
Peter De Greef
- Lord Petersfield (His Son)
- (as Peter De Greeff)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFilm debut of Hazel Court, who had one line of dialogue.
- Crazy creditsOpening credits prologue: In the year of Grace 1860, two brothers set out from the mining village of Leybourne for London Town . . . .
- ConnectionsFeatured in Those British Faces: A Tribute to Stanley Holloway 1890-1982 (1993)
- SoundtracksThe Man on the Flying Trapeze
(uncredited)
Music by Alfred Lee
Lyrics by George Leybourne
Arranged by Ernest Irving
Featured review
Joe/George (Tommy Trinder) and the Great Vance (Stanley Holloway) have a Music-Hall rivalry in the ale-houses of Victorian England. When the theatre owners threaten to close down the music-halls, George and Vance come together to fight off the threat.
There is strangely no romance for the lead characters in this story. This is given to Jean Kent as "Dolly" to play out with some complete non-entity. It has relevance to the story but, unfortunately, the story isn't exactly gripping. We are subjected to lots of forgettable songs that all sound the same. The most memorable part of the film is an amusing section about a duel between the two main rivals and it is actually quite funny. Far better than the appalling attempt at making a humorous duel scene that was made by another British film, "Vice Versa", in 1948. "Champagne Charlie" passes the time, reminds us of a time now forgotten, and you will enjoy the film if you like boring sing-a-longs.
There is strangely no romance for the lead characters in this story. This is given to Jean Kent as "Dolly" to play out with some complete non-entity. It has relevance to the story but, unfortunately, the story isn't exactly gripping. We are subjected to lots of forgettable songs that all sound the same. The most memorable part of the film is an amusing section about a duel between the two main rivals and it is actually quite funny. Far better than the appalling attempt at making a humorous duel scene that was made by another British film, "Vice Versa", in 1948. "Champagne Charlie" passes the time, reminds us of a time now forgotten, and you will enjoy the film if you like boring sing-a-longs.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 12 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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