Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 35000000
Revenue
$ 57063861
Annie
'Daddy' Oliver Warbucks
Miss Hannigan
Grace Farrell
Rooster Hannigan
Lily St. Regis
Punjab
Asp
Molly
Pepper
Tessie
Kate
Duffy
July
FDR
Eleanor Roosevelt
Bert Healy
Boylan Sister
Boylan Sister
Boylan Sister
Drake
Mrs. Pugh
Mrs. Greer
Annette
Celette
Saunders
Frick
Frack
Photographer
Weasel
Pound Man
Mr. Bundles
Mrs. McKracky
Spike
Dancer
Dancer
Dancer
Dancer
Dancer
Dancer
Dancer
Dancer
Dancer
Dancer
Dancer
Dancer
Dancer
Dancer
Dancer
Dancer
Lead Dancer
Sound Effects Man at Radio Station (uncredited)
Pedestrian (uncredited)
Rockette (uncredited)
(uncredited)
Actor on Radio (uncredited)
Warbucks Estate Gatekeeper (uncredited)
Dancer (uncredited)
Rockette (uncredited)
Secretary (uncredited)
Dancer / Orphan (uncredited)
Dancer / Orphan (uncredited)
Staff Member (uncredited)
Radio City Usher (uncredited)
Marguerite Gautier (archive footage) (uncredited)
Armand Duval (archive footage) (uncredited)
Written by Geronimo1967 on 2023-06-08
Carol Burnett is wonderful as the conniving, neglectful manager of the orphanage ("Miss Hannigan") who cares not a jot for her charges and treats them like skivvies whilst she drinks//smokes and generally misbehaves her way through life. One day, multi-gazillionaire "Oliver 'Daddy' Warbucks" (Albert Finney) decides to allow an orphan to spend some time with him at his mansion and "Annie" (Aileen Quinn) is the winner of this golden ticket. Quickly, she charms the pants off them all - including the hard-hearted industrialist. When he decides to help her find her long lost parents by offering a reward "Hannigan" scents an opportunity and gets her equally dodgy brother "Rooster" (Tim Curry) and his delinquent girlfriend to fake parenthood, claim the reward - and kidnap the girl! The story is a bit strained at times, but it does have some fun dance routines; "The Sun'll Come Out Tomorrow" & "It's a Hard Knock Life" and also a superbly statuesque Geoffrey Holder as "Warbucks" Indian equivalent of "Oddjob" to help it over the odd bumps of tedium. Messrs. Finney & Curry very much enter into the spirit of it all and Quinn captures the vulnerability/feistiness of the title character charmingly.