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Dancing Pirate

The first dancing musical in 100% new Technicolor
1936 | 83m | English

(431 votes)

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Popularity: 0.8 (history)

Details

Jonathan Pride is a mild-mannered dance instructor in 1820 Boston. En route to visit relatives, Jonathan is shanghaied by a band of zany pirates and forced to work as a galley boy. When the pirate vessel arrives at the port of Las Palomas, Jonathan, clad in buccaneer's garb, makes his escape. Everyone in Las Palomas, including Governor Alcalde (Frank Morgan) and fetching senorita Serafina (Steffi Duna), assumes that Jonathan is the pirate chieftain, leading to a series of typical comic-opera complications.
Release Date: May 22, 1936
Director: Lloyd Corrigan
Writer: Francis Edward Faragoh, Lloyd Corrigan, Jack Wagner, Ray Harris, Emma-Lindsay Squier, Boris Ingster
Genres: Adventure, Comedy, Music
Keywords dictator, dance, sword, ship, kiss, teacher, pirate, singing, soldier, love interest, swashbuckler, tyrant
Production Companies Pioneer Pictures Corporation, Pioneer
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Jan 30, 2026
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Charles Collins Jonathan Pride
Frank Morgan Mayor Don Emilio Perena
Steffi Duna Serafina Perena
Luis Alberni Pamfilo (the Jailer)
Victor Varconi Don Balthazar (Monterey Captain of the Guards)
Rita Hayworth Specialty Dancer (uncredited)
Jack La Rue Lt. Chago (Baltazar's Aide)
Alma Real Blanca (Serafina's Maid)
William V. Mong Tecolote (Old Indian)
Mitchell Lewis Pirate Chief
Julian Rivero Shepherd
John Eberts Mozo
Eduardo Cansino Jr. Specialty Dancer (uncredited)
Nora Cecil Landlady (uncredited)
Jim Farley Sailor (uncredited)
Cy Kendall Bouncing Betty's Cook (uncredited)
Vera Lewis Orville's Mother (uncredited)
Ellen Lowe Miss Ponsonby (uncredited)
Pat Nixon Dance-Class Student (uncredited)
Marjorie Reynolds Dancer (uncredited)
Max Wagner Pirate (uncredited)
Harold Waldridge Orville (uncredited)
Name Title
John Speaks Producer
Merian C. Cooper Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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2024 4 5 10 2
2024 5 7 17 2
2024 6 5 11 2
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Reviews

Geronimo1967
6.0

I didn’t hold out much hope for the swashbuckling elements of this when it starts with “Pride” (Charles Collins) quite literally squeezed into a pair of trousers offering dancing lessons to the Bostonian elite. He makes a decent enough living, but decides to travel to visit his family and it’s en ro ... ute he finds his ship captured by nasty pirates who care little for his samba-ing! It’s touch and go as to whether or not he might walk the plank until he manages to escape when the ship docks for victuals and some piratical R&R! Quite quickly, and in no way plausibly, the local Governor (Frank Morgan) mistakes him for the captain. Despite his protestations that he is merely a dance instructor, the Governor is about to start him dangling from the end of a rope when his daughter “Serafina” (Steffi Duna) decides that she wants him to teach her to waltz! The arrival of “Capt. Balthazar” (Victor Varconi) might put the cat amongst the pigeons for poor old “Pride”, though, as he is no fan of pirates - or dancing, so it might well be that the only hope for this man is those very men whom he was attempting to escape from in the first place? Hmmm. Despite the fact that Collins has none of the charisma of a Cornel Wilde or a Ronald Colman, I think he does fine in this colourful hybrid. Certainly the pirates are more likely of Penzance than Tortuga and I could have done with a bit more swordplay and a little less swirling, but Morgan is on reliable form and the film moves along at quite a pace. There are a couple of grand-scale set-piece musical numbers from the pens of Rodgers and Hart that don’t quite seep into the memory, but with some colourful flamboyance help keep this actually nowhere near as bad as the opening scenes might suggest. It’s not great, but it isn’t terrible.

Aug 09, 2025