Meet Me After the Show

Meet Me After the Show
Directed byRichard Sale
Screenplay byMary Loos
Richard Sale
Story byErna Lazarus
Scott Darling
Produced byGeorge Jessel
StarringBetty Grable
Macdonald Carey
Rory Calhoun
CinematographyArthur E. Arling
Edited byJ. Watson Webb, Jr.
Music byKen Darby
Songs by Jule Styne (music)
and Leo Robin (lyrics)
Distributed byTwentieth-Century Fox
Release date
  • August 15, 1951 (1951-08-15) (New York)[1]
Running time
87 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$2 million (US rentals)[2][3]

Meet Me After the Show is a 1951 Technicolor musical film directed by Richard Sale and starring Betty Grable and Macdonald Carey.

Plot

Delilah Lee is groomed by her husband Jeff Ames for his new Broadway show. She becomes such a success that she feels that Jeff considers her more an asset than a wife. When the show's backer Gloria Carstairs makes advances toward Jeff, Delilah leaves him, but she later experiences regret and resolves to regain his love. She devises a scheme involving amnesia to lure Jeff back to her.

Cast

Production

Rory Calhoun later reunited with Betty Grable for How to Marry a Millionaire (1953), playing her romantic interest.

The film's music was composed by Jule Styne with lyrics by Leo Robin. Gwen Verdon appears uncredited as a singer and dancer in some of the numbers, including "No-Talent Joe"[4] and "I Feel Like Dancing".[5] Three songs from the film appeared on her only solo album, The Girl I Left Home For (1955).[6]

Reception

In a contemporary review for The New York Times, critic Howard Thompson wrote: "Miss Grable may be a charter member of the bubble gum school of acting and her vehicles are usually standard excuses for stringing together some vaudeville specialties, granted. But there's no denying that the sight of this curvaceous, platinum-topped dynamo, sprayed in Technicolor and singing and hoofing as though she were having the time of her life, is still something for anybody's sore eyes. A blessed good thing, too, in the case of the new production. While scenarists Richard Sale, who also directed, and Mary Loos manage to pep it up now and then with some blistering wisecracks. they've concocted a feigned case of amnesia for each of the stars that makes the plot as lumpy as oatmeal."[1]

References

  1. ^ a b Thompson, Howard (August 16, 1951). "The Screen in Review: Betty Grable in Technicolor Musical". The New York Times. p. 23.
  2. ^ 'The Top Box Office Hits of 1951', Variety, January 2, 1952
  3. ^ Aubrey Solomon, Twentieth Century-Fox: A Corporate and Financial History Rowman & Littlefield, 2002 p 223
  4. ^ "No-Talent Joe" on YouTube
  5. ^ "I Feel Like Dancing" on YouTube
  6. ^ Gwen Verdon - The Girl I Left Home For, 1956, retrieved January 7, 2026