THE BOHEMIAN GIRL is a frustrating film for me, since it contains one of my favorites series of scenes in all of Laurel and Hardy -- the pickpocket scene followed by the scene at the tavern where they play "fingers" in order to divvy up their loot. This could stand on it's own as a nice two-reeler, and it almost was as GYP THE GYPSY, the TV cutdown done by Regal Films. They left out the scene at the tavern, however, and included some scenes before and after that.
The other great scene is Stan getting drunk on the wine, although it is derivative of a similar scene in FRA DIAVOLO. The boys were certainly not averse to reusing material, but repeating it in another operetta is questionable. You do need to keep in mind that audiences back in the 30s, however, were not overly-familiar with every L&H routine via numerous viewings as we are today. So to many audiences, the scene probably seemed fresh.
I'm not very fond of the rest of the film, though the scenes I just described are enough to make the film worth seeing, especially in an age where it is extremely easy to view these pictures for free!
https://archive.org/details/swiss-miss-1938/THE_BOHEMIAN_GIRL+(1936).aviOf their 3 operetta spoofs, this is the weakest. It also has the least memorable score of the 3, though "I Dreamt I Dwelt in Marble Halls" is excellent and probably more familiar to modern audiences than any of the music in their other 2 operettas. Keep in mind that when the competition is FRA DIAVOLO and BABES IN TOYLAND, it is tough to beat them.
Mae Busch is wasted in this film. As others have pointed out, she is much more mean-spirited than usual here, and the idea of her cuckolding Ollie is a rather odd plot device for a comedy team whose audience had a large percentage of children. I didn't like the fact that they wrote Ollie's character to be so child-like in his reaction; to me they made him look like a buffoon.
The rest of the plot is ridiculous too -- when Arline is kidnapped, she is old enough to realize it, so why doesn't she put up a fuss? She knows who her real father is, but somehow accepts that it is now Ollie since Mae Busch told her so. In the original opera (not operetta), she is kidnapped as an infant, which makes more sense, but then they couldn't have used Darla Hood! (There is a difference between an opera and an operetta, if you google it. I always refer to the L&Hs as operettas, since that is what William K. Everson called them in THE FILMS OF LAUREL AND HARDY. He also refers to them as "operatic" spoofs and lampoons.
https://www.eno.org/discover-opera/beginners-guide-operetta/)
The original opera plot is loosely based on a Miguel de Cervantes' tale, "La gitanilla" ("The Little Gypsy Girl"). I noticed that it is contained in a book on my shelf titled CERVANTES: SIX EXEMPLARY NOVELS. Here it is titled "The Gipsy Maid", since that's how it was decided to be translated in "Barron's Educational Series" in 1961. I might have read the story before, since the book is from a course I took in college (long after 1961, I might add!). That being said, I wish I had a nickel for every book I was supposed to read in college but didn't! (I was an engineer; this was from one of the "non-technical elective" courses I had to take every semester.
) It's funny, but as I was watching this the other night, I was getting a Cervantes-like feel during the pickpocket scene. I just might finally read the story -- it's only 71 pages.
When Arline grows older, she would surely recognize the castle where she was born and spent her early years, yet she doesn't. I'm totally confused by all this -- did Mae Busch slip her a Mickey that erased her memory?
We are supposed to have some empathy for Count Arnheim when is daughter is kidnapped, even though he callously had Antonio Moreno whipped for trespassing. (I guess this was allowed in the time in history that this film takes place -- whenever that is.) Any empathy we still might have is totally erased when he has Stan and Ollie sent to a torture chamber!
I see there is a silent(!) version of this operetta on archive.org. I don't have the patience to sit through it and compare.
Finlayson shows up way too late in the film to make much of a mark, though what little he is given to do is funny. I would have preferred that he was one of the people that the boys had pickpocketed, rather than the guy who calls Ollie a "scurvy knave." Doh!!!
BTW, Thelma Todd looks great at the end of her song, when she is walking away from us, if you get my drift!
Does anyone know who dubbed the singing for Thelma? Randy's book doesn't say.