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Set in the Roaring Twenties, the story centers on Nanette Carter, a Westchester socialite with show business aspirations. She offers to invest $25,000 in a Broadway show if her boyfriend, producer Larry Blair, casts her in the starring role. What she doesn\'t realize is Larry is two-timing her with ingenue Beatrice Darcy, who he envisions as the lead. When he accepts Nanette\'s offer, she imposes upon her wealthy, penny-pinching uncle, J. Maxwell Bloomhaus, to lend her the money. He\'s willing to do so, on one condition - for the next 24 hours, his niece must answer "no" to every question she\'s asked. Comic complications ensue when the cast arrives at Nanette\'s estate to rehearse, and composer and pianist Jimmy Smith, who has romantic designs on the girl, falls victim to the bet she\'s made with her uncle. Nanette wins, only to discover Uncle Max has lost all his money in the stock market crash. The only person still solvent is attorney William Early, and Nanette\'s assistant Pauline Hastings sets out to charm him into backing the show.
The film was the first in which Doris Day received top billing and marked the first time she danced on-screen Tea for Two at Turner Classic Movies.
This was director Butler and leading lady Day\'s second collaboration, following It\'s a Great Feeling the previous year. The two went on to work together on Lullaby of Broadway, April in Paris, By the Light of the Silvery Moon, and Calamity Jane.
Gene Nelson won the Golden Globe Award for Most Promising Newcomer.
In his review in the New York Times, Bosley Crowther called the film "pleasant entertainment," "a sprightly show," and "quite a genial production" and added, "Miss Day and Mr. MacRae . . . complement each other like peanut butter and jelly." New York Times review
Time said, "[it] sheds a Technicolor tear for the good old days of plus fours, prohibition and the stock-market crash. The story . . . employs nearly every musical-comedy cliché . . . as hot-weather entertainment, Tea for Two is at its best when concentrating on the old tunes of Vincent Youmans, George Gershwin and Roger Wolfe Kahn." Time review
Tea for Two at the Internet Movie Database
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