Orchestra Wives
Orchestra Wives | |
---|---|
Orchestra Wives 1942 Theatrical poster | |
Directed by | Archie Mayo |
Produced by | William LeBaron |
Screenplay by |
Karl Tunberg Darrell Ware |
Story by | James Prindle |
Starring |
George Montgomery Ann Rutherford Lynn Bari Cesar Romero Marion Hutton |
Music by |
Alfred Newman Harry Warren Mack Gordon |
Cinematography | Lucien Ballard |
Edited by | Robert Bischoff |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Twentieth Century Fox |
Release dates |
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Running time | 98 min |
Language | English |
Box office | $1.3 million (US rentals)[1] |
Orchestra Wives is a 1942 American musical film by 20th Century Fox starring Ann Rutherford, George Montgomery, and Glenn Miller. The film was the second and last film to feature The Glenn Miller Orchestra, and is notable among the many swing era musicals because its plot is more serious and realistic than the insubstantial storylines that were typical of the genre. The movie was re-released in 1954 by 20th Century Fox to tie-in with the biopic The Glenn Miller Story.
Synopsis
Connie Ward (Ann Rutherford) is a young woman who on the spur of the moment marries Bill Abbott (George Montgomery), a trumpet player in Gene Morrison's (Glenn Miller) swing band (Miller's character was given a name with initials that matched Miller's so that the band could use their monogrammed stainless-steel music stands). She soon finds herself at odds with the cattiness and petty jealousies of the other band members' spouses, as they accompany their husbands on their cross-country train tour. Her discomfort is exacerbated by a flirtation between Abbott and Jaynie (Lynn Bari), the band's female vocalist. When Ward eventually walks out on Abbott, their split releases so many other tensions among the musicians and their wives, that leader Morrison is forced to break up the orchestra. Ward and the band's pianist Sinjin (Cesar Romero) then work behind the scenes to reunite the band, which also produces a reconciliation between Ward and Abbott (with additional help from Connie's father (Grant Mitchell)).
(Montgomery's Trumpet playing was dubbed by Glenn Miller's lead trumpet soloist Johnny Best for the movie. Montgomery managed to get notes out during the rehearsals for the movie, but they were out of tune, so Glenn decided to get Johnny to dub in the trumpet solos).
Songs
Orchestra Wives features a treasure trove of songs by Mack Gordon and Harry Warren, the same team responsible for the hits featured in Miller's first film Sun Valley Serenade (1941).[2] The main production number is "I've Got a Gal in Kalamazoo", an analogue of "Chattanooga Choo-Choo", from the first film that features a folksy vocal and some gutsy tenor sax work by Tex Beneke, backup singing by Marion Hutton with the Modernaires, and a gravity-defying dance sequence by the Nicholas Brothers.[3] This was nominated: Best Music, Original Song in Academy Awards) Harry Warren (music), Mack Gordon (lyrics).[3]
Other songs include the period piece "People Like You and Me", a breakneck performance of "Bugle Call Rag" and the classic romantic ballads "At Last" (originally intended for Miller's initial film, Sun Valley Serenade) and "Serenade in Blue".[4] The film score uses "At Last" as a musical motif that is played throughout the movie in dramatic and romantic scenes. "That's Sabotage" was also written for the movie but was cut from the film. The song was, however, released as a 78 single by Glenn Miller and His Orchestra, and the unused soundtrack recording was featured on various LP compilations of Miller's soundtracks.
Glenn Miller's theme song "Moonlight Serenade" from 1939 also appears over the opening credits.
"Boom Shot", an instrumental composed by Glenn Miller and Billy May for the movie, also is played in the movie, first on the jukebox in the soda shop, then when Ann Rutherford and Harry Morgan are shown dancing, but is uncredited on the soundtrack and film credits. "Boom Shot" is heard in the movie when the Gene Morrison orchestra plays it at the dance as filmed by the camera in a boom shot.
Cast listing
Actor/Actress | Role |
---|---|
Ann Rutherford | Connie Ward / Connie Abbott |
George Montgomery | Bill Abbott |
Glenn Miller | Gene Morrison |
Lynn Bari | Jaynie |
Carole Landis | Natalie |
Cesar Romero | Sinjin |
Virginia Gilmore | Elsie |
Glenn Miller Orchestra | Gene Morrison Orchestra |
The Modernaires | Themselves |
The Nicholas Brothers | Themselves |
Bobby Hackett | Himself |
Uncredited performances
Three future stars have uncredited appearances: Jackie Gleason portrays the band's bass player, Ben Beck, and in the soda fountain scene, Harry Morgan is the soda-jerk Cully Anderson, who also dates Connie Ward (Ann Rutherford), and Dale Evans plays Ann Rutherford's friend Hazel.[5] Pat Friday dubbed Lynn Bari's singing, as she had done in Sun Valley Serenade. George Montgomery's on-screen trumpet playing was actually performed on the soundtrack by Miller sideman Johnny Best.
Harry Morgan would co-star in the film The Glenn Miller Story in 1953, portraying Glenn Miller Orchestra pianist Chummy MacGregor. The real Chummy MacGregor dubbed piano playing for Cesar Romero in this film.
Award nominations
- Nominated: Best Music, Original Song, "I've Got a Gal in Kalamazoo", Harry Warren (music), Mack Gordon (lyrics) (1943)
Production notes
- Production Dates: 6 April-17 April; 22 April-early June 1941
- The working title of this film was Orchestra Wife.
- Information in the MPAA/PCA Collection at the AMPAS Library indicates that an early draft of the film's screenplay was rejected by the PCA because it implied that some of the characters had committed adultery. After PCA officials met with producer William LeBaron in mid-June 1942, the story was approved on the condition that there would be no adultery depicted.
- Orchestra Wives was the second and final film made by famed band leader Glenn Miller, who, in September 1942, disbanded his orchestra in order to enter the military.
- An July 8, 1942 Variety news item reported that the song "At Last," composed by Mack Gordon and Harry Warren, had originally been recorded by Miller and his orchestra for the 1941 Twentieth Century-Fox film Sun Valley Serenade.
- Studio records indicate that the Gordon and Warren song "That's Sabotage" was recorded for Orchestra Wives and was included on the soundtrack album, even though it does not appear in the completed picture.
- Instrumental versions of "You Say The Sweetest Things, Baby" and "The Darktown Strutters' Ball" were also to have been recorded for the film, but were cut.
See also
References
- ↑ "101 Pix Gross in Millions" Variety 6 Jan 1943 p 58
- ↑ Clarke, Donald. "The Rise and Fall of Popular Music". Retrieved April 28, 2010.
- 1 2 Miller, Glenn (1943). "I've Got a Gal in Kalamazoo" (video). Orchestra Wives. YouTube. Retrieved 27 December 2011.
- ↑ Classic Movie Musicals, Orchestra Wives
- ↑ IMDb credits, Orchestra Wives
External links
- Orchestra Wives at the American Film Institute Catalog
- Orchestra Wives at the Internet Movie Database
- Orchestra Wives at AllMovie
- Orchestra Wives at the TCM Movie Database
- Orchestra Wives at Rotten Tomatoes