Alice Duer Miller's novel
Gowns by Roberta was adapted into the 1933 Broadway musical
Roberta, with music by
Jerome Kern and
Otto Harbach. The 1935 filmization of
Roberta was slightly adapted to accommodate the dancing talents of
Fred Astaire and
Ginger Rogers, though their roles are secondary to the characters portrayed by
Irene Dunne and
Randolph Scott. Dunne plays a deposed White Russian princess who has become a famed Parisian couturier. Dunne is the partner of "Roberta" (
Helen Westley), who passes away, leaving her half of the business to American football player Randolph Scott--who of course knows next to nothing about the gown business, and couldn't care less anyway. Astaire co-stars as bandleader Huck Haines, the character played by
Bob Hope in the original Broadway production of
Roberta. Rogers rounds out the cast as a phony Polish countess who happens to be Astaire's former girlfriend. Many of the songs written for
Roberta were retained for the film version, including ""Lovely to Look At," ""Smoke Gets in Your Eyes"" and ""I Won't Dance";" other tunes are heard as background music. Keep an eye out for a blond
Lucille Ball as a fashion model. Withdrawn from circulation for many years due to the 1952 MGM remake (titled
Lovely to Look At),
Roberta began making the public-domain rounds in the early 1980s.