Hello, Dolly! Poster

Hello, Dolly!

Release Date: 1969-12-12

Rating: ⭐ 7/10 (362 votes)

Genres: Music, Comedy, Romance

Overview: Dolly Levi is a strong-willed matchmaker who travels to Yonkers, New York in order to see the miserly "well-known unmarried half-a-millionaire" Horace Vandergelder. In doing so, she convinces his niece, his niece's intended, and Horace's two clerks to travel to New York City.

Production: Chenault Productions, 20th Century Fox

🎭 Top Cast

Barbra Streisand
Barbra Streisand
as Dolly Levi
Walter Matthau
Walter Matthau
as Horace Vandergelder
Michael Crawford
Michael Crawford
as Cornelius Hackl
Marianne McAndrew
Marianne McAndrew
as Irene Molloy
Danny Lockin
Danny Lockin
as Barnaby Tucker
E.J. Peaker
E.J. Peaker
as Minnie Fay

📝 User Reviews

CinemaSerf
⭐ 7/10
Dec 25, 2022

Barbra Streisand and Walter Matthau make for quite a formidable team in this entertaining comedy drama about a marriage broker ("Dolly") who is engaged to find a bride for the wealthy "Horace". He is a bit cantankerous so she has her work cut out for her, but undeterred - she travels to Yonkers where she embroils his two clerks "Cornelius" (Michael Crawford) and "Barnaby" (Danny Lockin) in more affairs of the heart with "Minnie" (E.J. Peaker) and "Irene" (Marianne McAndrew) before a denouement that we all expected, but is nonetheless fun to watch. This film really all belongs to a star very much at the top of her game delivering some pithy lines whilst attired in crippling corsets and dancing in some uncomfortable looking lace-up boots. Directed by Gene Kelly so you would expect the ensemble dance numbers to be top drawer, and the they are - synchronised to within an inch of their lives, but always looking natural and flowing enthusiastically. Jerry Herman certainly does the business with the lyrics - "Put on Your Sunday Clothes"; "It Takes a Woman" and the Louis Armstrong assisted title song all make this a quickly paced and enjoyable romp through all things mischievous, Jewish and one that is at times almost bawdy. Matthau is a revelation - he really enters into the spirit of things and Michael Crawford (though never my favourite singer) demonstrates a nimble fleetness-of-foot that adds a charm to the proceedings too. I couldn't quite believe that 2½ hours flew by so quickly and if you are a fan of top-end musical theatre then you are in for a real treat.

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