This all black film was Lena Horne’s screen debut. Made for black audiences, it was re-released after the cross-over success of her two great 1943 films, Cabin in the Sky and Stormy Weather. The Duke Is Tops is a typical film about stage performers, and it is certainly a B movie. Duke Davis (Ralph Cooper) and Ethel Andrews (Horne) are a songwriter/singer team. When Ethel gets bigger offers, Duke can’t come with, so he breaks it off hard with her so she’ll have no regrets. He travels to the South with an old friend who is selling cure-all elixirs from his wagon; meanwhile, without Duke’s behind-the-scenes work, Ethel is a flop in New York. There are several wonderful musical performances.
Ralph Cooper, Lena Horne
1938, B&W, 73 minutes
Bonus feature:
Black and Tan (1929)
Duke Ellington
1929, B&W, 19 minutes