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The Cowboy and the Girl (1928) Online

The Cowboy and the Girl (1928) Online
Original Title :
The Cowboy and the Girl
Genre :
Movie / Short / Comedy / Music
Year :
1928
Cast :
Ray Mayer,Edith Evans
Type :
Movie
Time :
8min
Rating :
6.0/10

The scene is a parlor out West, with Ray Mayer sitting at the piano in is cowboy duds - hat, scarf, and chaps. He plays a little barrel-house music and then introduces Edith Evans, who ... See full summary

The Cowboy and the Girl (1928) Online

The scene is a parlor out West, with Ray Mayer sitting at the piano in is cowboy duds - hat, scarf, and chaps. He plays a little barrel-house music and then introduces Edith Evans, who enters wearing fur. She sings - her voice a light-opera soprano - while Mayer plays. After singing one song, she leaves the stage to Mayer, who does another comic song, this one with lyrics. Evans returns, having changed costumes, and sings "Sing me a little baby song," with Mayer's sometimes comic accompaniment. The set ends.
Complete credited cast:
Ray Mayer Ray Mayer - Himself - Pianist and Singer
Edith Evans Edith Evans - Herself - Singer

Vitaphone production reel #2339


User reviews

Dagdarad

Dagdarad

One of the staples of the vaudeville stage was the lady singer. She would come out and warble a few of the latest sets. Some of the acts, however, turned this on its head. Jimmy Conlin, later a member of Preston Sturges' stock company would play the piano and do funny things while his wife tried to sing.

This recording of Ray Mayer and his wife Edith Evans -- no, not that Edith Evans -- is that sort of stage act and it's a very nice one. Mr. Mayer performs in a cowboy costume, including chaps and plays a ragtime piano very well, complete with silly gestures. He even sings a novelty song. Miss Evans sings a couple of hot jazz numbers very sweetly, including the standard "Mine All Mine." It's a very pleasant act. With the ending of vaudeville Mr. Mayer had a minor career in Hollywood in musicals and as a supporting actor. Miss Evans appeared with him in one more Vitaphone recording of their stage act and in a charity movie, presumably also doing their act, then seems to have disappeared. I hope they had a good life together.
Malarad

Malarad

The Cowboy and the Girl (1928)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

The cowboy is Ray Mayer and the girl is his wife Edith Evans and they star in this early talkie from Vitaphone/Warner. Basically Mayer sits at the piano and does a couple songs and every so often calls his wife to do a couple more. It's doubtful teenagers or the MTV crowd are going to be interested in these early musical numbers but I think film buffs should find them entertaining. When one watches a lot of these early Vitaphone shorts you never really know what to expect because the studio was pretty much putting anyone in front of the camera. Sometimes you got something special and other times you were given very poor acts. Mayer and Evans are somewhere in the middle. While none of the songs were all that memorable, I found both performers to be quite charming together and they were certainly entertaining enough to make it easy to sit through the film. On a visual level not too much happens as the camera pretty much just stands still and captures everything. The sound quality is actually quite good here and ranks better than some of the other films from this era.
Very Old Chap

Very Old Chap

While Ray Meyer IS dressed up in cowboy duds, there really isn't anything else that has anything to do with cowboys in this one! He sits at the upright piano and plays. He also sings one number. And, oddly he chews gum and even eats during the film...not to mention wearing heavy makeup and lipstick. While heavy makeup wasn't too unusual for the time, he really seemed to be wearing A LOT! He's also joined by Edith Evans to sing a couple tunes but again this has nothing to do with cowboys! The singing is okay and the jokes a bit corny...this one is only about average compared to the other Vitaphone shorts I've seen...and I've seen at least a hundred of them.