Year: 1953
Runtime: 91 mins
Language: English
Director: Robert Z. Leonard
Once a Ziegfeld star, Dodo Delwyn now works as a clown in amusement parks, a career ruined by drinking; his son Little Dink believes his father can regain fame and urges former agent “Uncle” Goldie to find work. When Goldie can’t help, Dink is sent to his mother Paula but returns to his father, leading Dodo to take a TV gig and chase a comeback.
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Dodo Delwyn, Red Skelton, is a funny man with a serious drinking problem. He’s famous in show business for a notorious moment: the time he fell off the Ziegfeld Follies stage, drunk, and punched his longtime manager. His devoted son, Dink Delwyn, Tim Considine, is his biggest fan and caretaker, trying to keep him afloat as Dodo’s act evolves. Today, Dodo’s routine centers on heckling people as they exit a carnival ride—while moving sidewalks, railings, gusts of air, and a light shock from his wand coax laughter from the audience and from the mostly willing victims.
A confrontation at the park changes everything. An arrogant, humorless young man, embarrassed in front of his date, knocks Dodo to the floor. The amusement park stage manager inspects Dodo’s cut lip, and Dodo accuses him of trying to sniff out his breath. He’s sober for a month, a fact Dink bears witness to, but the quarrel is the last straw, and Gallagher, Don Beddoe, fires him.
Despite Dink’s best efforts, the situation worsens when Dodo ruins a job audition and loses his agent. Dink helps him down, undresses him, and puts him to bed. The next morning, they visit “Uncle Goldie,” Dodo’s old agent, Loring Smith, who agrees to take Dodo on as a client and hands him a small advance, “to bind the deal.” Goldie recalls Dodo’s glory days in the Ziegfeld Follies and confesses, to a skeptical associate, that the famous punch isn’t entirely Dodo’s fault.
Hoagley, a fellow veteran of Goldie’s circle, offers Dodo a one-night engagement at a sales convention at the Ritz. Father and son talk excitedly about a fresh start, and they fetch Dodo’s tuxedo and a watch Flo Ziegfeld once gave him from a pawn shop. Dodo gifts the watch to Dink, hoping for a brighter future; but the next morning, Henderson—the boy’s mother’s new husband—asks for the boy and Dink discovers the watch is missing. Dodo’s luck continues to slide as he loses the money he makes in a dice game and, later, the watch that was meant to secure his bond with his son.
To cover the losses, Dodo accepts a gig at a stag party with strippers for a pittance of $65, trying to buy back the precious watch. A police raid leads to Goldie bailing him out, but Goldie’s disappointment is clear: he would have given Dodo $6,500 if Dodo had just asked. In a moment of desperation and anger, Dodo tells Goldie to take Dink back to his mother, and cruelly tells the boy he no longer wants him, even slapping him. As Goldie and Dink depart, Dodo collapses into tears and punches an old photograph of himself, crying, > I hit my kid! I hit my kid!…
Dink finds himself welcomed, finally, by the Hendersons, but the boy runs away again, unsettled by the rollercoaster of his father’s career and sobriety. Goldie, ever the pragmatist, drums up a fresh opportunity: a television show built around his name—The Dodo Delwyn Show. Dodo resists at first, but when Dink appears, the boy’s happiness is palpable, and the tide begins to turn. During a tense rehearsal, Dodo experiences a breathless moment while ascending stairs, but the magic of a comeback feels within reach.
The Hendersons attend the show’s opening, and Paula Henderson, Jane Greer, tells Dodo that Dink belongs with him and that the boy has found a real place in his life. The telecast becomes a huge success, and after several acts, Dodo fights dizziness but pushes through a topsy-turvy finale in which a drunk man wakes up to a room turned on its side, thanks to his wife and a crafty carpenter. He takes his bow and expresses gratitude to the audience for “filling his heart.” Offstage, the celebration is cut short as Dodo collapses; the crowd gasps, and the show ends with tragedy.
The news hits Dink hard. He races through a flurry of emotions, moving from man to man in search of his father, before finally finding Paula and seeking comfort in her arms. He calls out to his mother, then repeats, “Dodo is dead,” as they leave the studio lights behind and walk away from the life his father had built. The story closes on a note of loss, endurance, and the quiet, painful endurance of a son who loved a father who could not quite save himself.
Last Updated: October 09, 2025 at 11:24
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