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The Bowery

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Raoul Walsh
Produced by 20th Century Pictures
Written by Howard Estabrook
James Gleason
Michael L. Simmons (novel)
Bessie Roth Solomon (novel)
Starring Wallace Beery
George Raft
Jackie Cooper
Fay Wray
Pert Kelton
Music by Alfred Newman
Cinematography Barney McGill
Editing by Allen McNeil
Distributed by United Artists
Release date(s) October 7, 1933 (1933-10-07)
Running time 92 minutes
Country United States
Language English

The Bowery is a 1933 historical film about the Lower East Side of Manhattan at the turn of the century. The movie was directed by Raoul Walsh and features Wallace Beery as saloon owner Chuck Connors, George Raft as Steve Brodie, the first man to jump off the Brooklyn Bridge and live, Jackie Cooper as a pugnacious child, Fay Wray (in the same year as King Kong) as the leading lady, and Pert Kelton (the first "Alice Kramden" on Jackie Gleason's The Honeymooners) as a bawdy dance hall singer.

George Raft and Fay Wray

The film is not exactly a festival of political correctness, but it is an absorbing presentation of the views and behaviors common at the time. Modern viewers should know that the movie opens with a close-up of a saloon window featuring a sign saying "Nigger Joe's" in large letters (the name of an actual Bowery bar from the period). At one point, Cooper's character throws a rock through a Chinatown window, knocking over a kerosene lamp and causing a lethal fire that spreads through the block. When Beery's character berates him for carelessly killing so many innocent Chinese people, Cooper's character responds, "They was just Chinks," whereupon Beery immediately softens, saying "Awww..." while affectionately mussing the boy's hair.

Cast

This movie was also Lucille Ball's first film. She was uncredited as, "Blonde"

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