Sailor's Lady
Sailor's Lady | |
---|---|
Directed by | Allan Dwan |
Starring | Nancy Kelly Jon Hall Joan Davis Dana Andrews Buster Crabbe |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date | July 5, 1940 |
Language | English |
Sailor's Lady, also known as Sweetheart of Turret One, is a 1940 film directed by Allan Dwan and starring Nancy Kelly and Jon Hall. The supporting cast includes Joan Davis, Dana Andrews, and Buster Crabbe. Football player Amby Schindler had an uncredited appearance in this motion picture after portraying one of The Winkies in The Wizard of Oz (1939).
Plot[]
The city's beauty parlors are flooded with hopeful women as the Navy fleet and its sailors are coming to visit. Sally Gilroy is one of these expectant girls. Sally is quite nervous about the visit since her fiancé Danny is among the arriving sailors, and she is supposed to marry him in the next few days. Her best friends Myrtle and Georgine try to calm her down and tell her there is nothing to worry about.
But it turns out there is. Danny's best friend and sailor colleague Scrappy Wilson has grown tired of marriage. Right before their ship, the USS Dakota, enters the docks his pay is withheld after a court order ruling, because he owes his wife alimony. Scrappy decides to save Danny from going through the same thing and stop him from marrying.
Scrappy involves another sailor, Goofer, in his plan. They plant a gun part in Danny's sailor duffel bag before he disembarks the ship, and Danny is arrested when he is caught stealing Navy equipment by Chief Mulcahy.
Scrappy himself goes ashore and meets Sally, telling her that Danny is going to spend the entire month-long visit in the ship's jail. Another sailor named Rodney tries to make Sally jilt Danny and go with him instead. Sally rejects him and desperately decides she has to bring Danny ashore at some point during the visit.
Danny manage to escape jail and get on the next boat to the shore, and he and Sally go to their brand new house. When they arrive their, Sally reveals a big surprise – she has a baby to take care of. She has adopted it after a friend and her husband was killed in a car accident. Sally has named the baby Margaret Lane "Skipper". Danny is not overly happy with this new family development.
Danny is discovered by a shore patrol, who arrest him again for going AWOL using another sailor's identity. Sally tries to help out by telling the ship commander, Captain Roscoe, that Danny only went ashore to visit his sick baby, and that they are already husband and wife. Roscoe swallows her explanation and not only drops the charges against Danny, but promotes him to help him take care of his new family.
Rodney doesn't give up on Sally, and visits to play with Skipper. When Danny arrives to his home on a legitimate pass, he gets into an argument with "home-wrecker" Rodney. The couple is under supervision by Miss Purvis, who acts with the mandate of the juvenile court, and a fight wouldn't improve their status as adoption parents.
They decide to throw a party to get on Miss Purvis' good side, but the party derails when Scrappy's friend Barnacle arrives and picks a fight with Danny. Miss Purvis is very upset by the men's behavior, and the party ends with Sally breaking up with Danny.
Rodney takes the opportunity to propose to Sally, trying to convince her that she needs a husband to keep Skipper. Sally reluctantly accepts his proposal, but Danny soon returns and he and Sally make up again. Sally breaks off the new engagement to Rodney, but when Danny finds out about the deceit, and a fight ensues, destroying the entire house interior.
Miss Purvis sees the devastation and gets the two men arrested by another shore patrol. Desperate not to lose Skipper, Sally sneaks aboard the Dakota and leaves the baby on board in Chied Mulcahy's room before returning ashore. The fleet sets sail to participate in the naval war games.
When Sally cannot return Skipper to the authorities she is faced with juvenile court. Skipper is discovered on board, and Danny decides to tell the whole story to Captain Roscoe. When the ship starts firing its cannons, the baby starts screaming and the ship doctor tells Roscoe to stop firing or the baby will suffer permanent damages. Roscoe is reluctant to do so, afraid his good reputation will be destroyed and he will lose his chance of becoming an Admiral of the fleet. It turns out that all that was wrong with Skipper was a loose safety pin, and that Roscoe's superiors praise him for his timely cease fire.
Danny eventually comes back ashore and is married to his Sally at the Church of Good Shepherd.[1]
Cast[]
- Nancy Kelly as Sally Gilroy
- Jon Hall as Danny Malone
- Joan Davis as Myrtle
- Dana Andrews as Scrappy Wilson
- Mary Nash as Miss Purvis
- Buster Crabbe as Rodney (billed as Larry Crabbe)
- Kay Aldridge as Georgine (billed as Katharine Aldridge)
- Harry Shannon as Father McGann
- Wally Vernon as Goofer
- Bruce Hampton as Skipper
- Charles D. Brown as Capt. Roscoe
- Selmer Jackson as Executive Officer
- Edgar Dearing as Chief Master-of-Arms
- Edmund MacDonald as Barnacle
- William B. Davidson as Judge Hinsdale
Production[]
The project was known as The Sweetheart of Turret One. It was developed by Sam Goldwyn based on a story by Spig Wead which Goldwyn purchased in August 1939 to use as a vehicle for his younger contract players including Jon Hall and Dana Andrews.[2]
Frederick Bennett did a treatment and Niven Busch did the screenplay. In November 1939 the entire project was sold to Daryl Zanuck at Fox.[3]
The title was changed to Fleet's In. Filming began October 25[4] and ended February 12.[5]
It was Hall's first film since The Hurricane. Although that movie had been a big hit, he was under contract to Goldwyn who did not make that many movies and could not find a suitable role for Hall. Sailor's Lady started a period of busy activity for the actor.[6]
Reception[]
The New York Times said "the comedy is but indifferently exploited" and "bogs down pretty frequently in feeble melodrama."[7]
References[]
- ^ http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/88899/Sailor-s-Lady/
- ^ DOUGLAS W. CHURCHILL (Aug 17, 1939). "SCREEN NEWS HERE AND IN HOLLYWOOD: 'Quo Vadis' Is Scheduled by Metro for Production During the Winter 'WIZARD OF OZ' AT CAPITOL Premiere of Technicolor Film Today Features Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney in Person". THE NEW YORK TIMES. p. 23.
- ^ Schallert, E. (Nov 23, 1939). "DRAMA". Los Angeles Times. ProQuest 164940417.
- ^ "NEWS OF THE SCREEN". New York Times. Sep 20, 1939. p. 38.
- ^ Schallert, Edwin (Feb 13, 1940). "Costarring of Tracy, Bette Davis Hinted". Los Angeles Times. p. 13.
- ^ "Looking at Hollywood: Jon Hall, a Forgotten Hero". Chicago Daily Tribune. July 7, 1940. p. d3.
- ^ BOSLEY CROWTHER (June 29, 1940). "THE SCREEN: 'The Man Who Talked Too Much' Does So at the Strand--'Sailor's Lady' at the Roxy At the Roxy At the 86th Street Casino". New York Times. p. 18.
External links[]
- English-language films
- 1940 films
- Films directed by Allan Dwan
- 1940 comedy films
- American films
- American comedy films
- 20th Century Fox films
- American black-and-white films