Tip Toes
Tip Toes is a 1927 British silent film comedy-drama, directed by Herbert Wilcox and starring Dorothy Gish and Will Rogers. The film is a loose adaptation of the stage musical Tip-Toes, with the action transferred from Florida to London.
Plot
Tip Toes and her two partners Uncle Hen and Al have a struggling music-hall act. When they go for auditions, theatre managers are keen on Tip Toes as a solo, but do not want the men. Tip Toes turns down offers to go it alone out of loyalty to her fellows. In deep financial trouble, they decide as a last throw of the dice to book into a suite at a high-class hotel and put the story about that Tip Toes is a sophisticated heiress, while she tries to snag a wealthy gentleman. Tip Toes attracts the interest of a young peer, but the plans of the trio are constantly on the point of being undermined as Hen and Al get into a series of scrapes.Cast
- Dorothy Gish as Tip Toes Kaye
- Will Rogers as Uncle Hen Kaye
- Nelson Keys as Al Kaye
- Miles Mander as Rollo Stevens
- Dennis Hoey as Hotelier
- John Manners as Lord William Montgomery
Production
Reception
Tip Toes was the last in a four-picture deal between Wilcox and Paramount to star Gish in British films. The earlier films had all been relatively favourably received by contemporary critics; however Tip Toes appears to have attracted almost universally negative responses. The Bioscope dismissed it as "feeble", while Variety accused the film of being "not only a libel on Americans, but on American vaudeville and its artists".The film lost money.