IMDb RATING
5.9/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
A brother and sister find romance and good clean fun at the state fair in Dallas.A brother and sister find romance and good clean fun at the state fair in Dallas.A brother and sister find romance and good clean fun at the state fair in Dallas.
- Awards
- 1 win & 2 nominations
Tap Canutt
- Red Hoertert
- (as Edward 'Tap' Canutt)
Bebe Allen
- Usherette
- (uncredited)
Sheila Allen
- Hipplewaite's Girl
- (uncredited)
Leon Alton
- Nightclub Patron
- (uncredited)
Don Anderson
- Audience Member
- (uncredited)
Al Beaudine
- Contest Spectator
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAnn-Margret was a brunette, as can be witnessed from her early album covers and her screen test footage from State Fair (1962). It was director Jose Ferrer who recommended that she dye her hair red during pre-production of this film. The finished effect was so dazzling that she adopted this shade from that point on.
- GoofsThe Frake family arrives at the fair in early morning, and skip breakfast to go right to the fairgrounds. Margy heads for the Midway, where the clock tower shows the time as 4:27 in the afternoon.
- Quotes
Margy Frake: What had gotten into me, anyway? The things I used to like, I don't like anymore. I want a lot of things I've never had before.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Rodgers & Hammerstein: The Sound of Movies (1996)
- SoundtracksOverture (Main Title and 'Our State Fair')
Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II
Music by Richard Rodgers
Performed by Pat Boone, Tom Ewell, Alice Faye, and Chorus
Featured review
The third film version of 'State Fair' (and the second musical version) is only partly successful, although it is nowhere near as bad as reviews of the time would have you believe.
Margy Frake this time round is played by newcomer Pamela Tiffin, who is rather colourless (and has her voice dubbed as Jeanne Crain did 17 years earlier). Her squire at the fair this time round is called Jerry and works for that new-fangled media, the 'tube' or TV. He's played by Bobby Darin who looks far too old to be chasing Tiffin - perhaps that is why a couple of references were added in this version about her age.
Pat Boone, in one of his few film appearances, is really rather good as Wayne Frake, who is now a racing driver, and of course he does his own songs and rather well. As the show singer Emily, Ann-Margret is embarrassing and too trashy; I always find her a bit OTT, as she is here.
The Frake parents, Tom Ewell and Alice Faye are charming and both have songs created for this version which were not in the '45 film, including a charming duet when they are out on the midway.
The new songs, written by Rodgers alone as Hammerstein had died by the time the film was created, are a mixed bunch. 'Never Say No To A Man' is just plain odd, although is a nice number for Faye's voice. 'Sweet Hog of Mine' fits perfectly, although some of the others feel like padding. Now the Sate Fair has relocated to Texas, we have a new song to replace 'All I Owe Ioway', this time it is 'The Little Things In Texas I Love'.
Although watchable, the relationship between Jerry and Margy in particular does not have the easy romance we saw in previous versions; while Emily does not gain the audience sympathy her character should.
A misfire, then, but a fascinating companion piece to the earlier version and it is useful to see them released together on DVD.
Margy Frake this time round is played by newcomer Pamela Tiffin, who is rather colourless (and has her voice dubbed as Jeanne Crain did 17 years earlier). Her squire at the fair this time round is called Jerry and works for that new-fangled media, the 'tube' or TV. He's played by Bobby Darin who looks far too old to be chasing Tiffin - perhaps that is why a couple of references were added in this version about her age.
Pat Boone, in one of his few film appearances, is really rather good as Wayne Frake, who is now a racing driver, and of course he does his own songs and rather well. As the show singer Emily, Ann-Margret is embarrassing and too trashy; I always find her a bit OTT, as she is here.
The Frake parents, Tom Ewell and Alice Faye are charming and both have songs created for this version which were not in the '45 film, including a charming duet when they are out on the midway.
The new songs, written by Rodgers alone as Hammerstein had died by the time the film was created, are a mixed bunch. 'Never Say No To A Man' is just plain odd, although is a nice number for Faye's voice. 'Sweet Hog of Mine' fits perfectly, although some of the others feel like padding. Now the Sate Fair has relocated to Texas, we have a new song to replace 'All I Owe Ioway', this time it is 'The Little Things In Texas I Love'.
Although watchable, the relationship between Jerry and Margy in particular does not have the easy romance we saw in previous versions; while Emily does not gain the audience sympathy her character should.
A misfire, then, but a fascinating companion piece to the earlier version and it is useful to see them released together on DVD.
- How long is State Fair?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $4,500,000 (estimated)
- Runtime2 hours
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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