Sweethearts on Parade
Cast & Crew
Allan Dwan
Ray Middleton
Lucille Norman
Eileen Christy
Bill Shirley
Estelita
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
In the 1870s, in Kokomo, Indiana, teenager Sylvia Townsend lives with her mother Kathleen, who teaches music to the local children. Kathleen is being courted by Harold Wayne, a doctor, while Harold's son Tommy is romantically interested in Sylvia. Sylvia, who never knew her real father, tells Kathleen that she would like her to remarry as she feels the need for a father-figure in her life. When alone, Kathleen recalls her life as a young singer: Kathleen appears in a production of The Bohemian Girl and marries fellow performer Cam Ellerby. After Sylvia is born, Cam is unfaithful, so Kathleen leaves him and settles with Sylvia in Kokomo. Kathleen's reverie is interrupted by the arrival in town of the Ogalla Remedy medicine show. As the wagon pass the Townsend house, Bill Gamble and Jim Riley, two young men with the company, gaze admiringly at Sylvia. Later, when Sylvia, who is an aspiring performer, asks to attend the show, her mother tells her that medicine shows are cheap and common. As the show sets up its theater tent in town, Harold, in his role as public health officer, and Sheriff Doolittle arrive to attempt to run it out of town. However, the show's proprietor, Cam, is able to appease the sheriff by claiming they are both members of the same brotherhood organization, then introduces Harold to Bill, who is a licenced doctor and has also studied music. Bill admits to Harold that their Ogalla medicine has no medical value, but says that it seems to do people a lot of good. Meanwhile, the show's female star, Lolita Lamont, and two of the female dancers flirt with the sheriff, who allows the show, or "concert" as Cam calls it, to continue. The next day, while walking near the Townsend house, Bill sees Sylvia in the garden and tells her that he is a doctor with an interest in music. Sylvia introduces him to her mother, who is impressed by Bill's singing. Later, while Sylvia is out walking with Bill, Harold visits Kathleen, and upon learning that Sylvia is with the "young whipper-snapper" from the medicine show, sends Tommy to find her. Harold again proposes marriage to Kathleen and faints with happiness when she accepts. Meanwhile, Bill confesses to Sylvia that he is with the show and she asks him to take her backstage, where she meets several members of the company. In the empty theater, Bill accompanies the stage-struck Sylvia as she sings an operatic aria she learned from her mother. When Cam hears Sylvia singing, he is reminded of Kathleen performing the same piece and, disturbed, orders Sylvia to leave. Bill escorts Sylvia home and, although he apologizes to Kathleen for causing her concern, Kathleen later warns her daughter that Bill may cause her great unhappiness. Kathleen then relates that she had been a singer and had married a man then left him when Sylvia was only one month old. Meanwhile, Cam is getting drunk in his wagon, bemoaning his lost love, Kathleen. Lolita, who is in love with Cam, helps him to sober up for the show, but while in a drunken state, he accidentally hurts her. Just as Bill is comforting Lolita, Sylvia arrives, sees them together and assumes that they are sweethearts. Disappointed, she turns to leave, but trips and is knocked unconscious. When Sylvia awakens in Cam's wagon, he offers kindly, fatherly advice. Kathleen, who has followed Sylvia, then comes face-to-face with Cam, and they are both shocked. After the women leave, a flustered Cam strikes Bill several times and fires him, prompting Lolita to decide to leave the show. Later, when Kathleen and Cam meet privately, Lolita overhears Cam's regret over his womanizing and plea that Kathleen not let Sylvia know her father is a medicine show drunk. After Kathleen tells him that she plans to remarry, Cam asks her to leave. Cam then apologizes to Bill, explaining that Sylvia is his daughter. The next morning, as the wagons prepare to depart, Lolita visits Sylvia and tells her that she was never in love with Bill and was simply trying to make Cam jealous. After informing Sylvia that Bill loves her, Lolita reveals that Cam is Sylvia's father and advises her to stop her mother from remarrying, as she believes that Kathleen is still in love with Cam. Sylvia then begs her mother to leave with her and the show, and when the wagons pass by the house once again, Cam and Bill are thrilled to see Kathleen and Sylvia waiting to join them.
Director
Allan Dwan
Cast
Ray Middleton
Lucille Norman
Eileen Christy
Bill Shirley
Estelita
Clinton Sundberg
Harry Carey Jr.
Irving Bacon
Leon Tyler
Marjorie Wood
Mara Corday
Ann Mccrea
Tex Terry
Emory Parnell
Marshall Bradford
Lois Austin
Lilian Hamilton
Marilyn Lindsey
Betty Farrington
Mary Alan Hokanson
Wayne Tredway
Ferris Taylor
George Meader
Vernon Rich
Jess Kirkpatrick
Don Dillaway
Mimi Gibson
June Kenney
Marshall Ruth
Michael Barton
Bud Dooley
George Bamby
Darol Rice
Dorothy Neumann
Almira Sessions
Patsy Moran
Jean Wright
Effie Laird
Wade Crosby
William Fawcett
Slim Duncan
Crew
Fred Allen
Rex Allen
Robert Armbruster
Robert Armbruster
Michael William Balfe
Thomas Haynes Bayly
Vincenzo Bellini
G. Bicknell
James Bland
Houston Branch
Alfred Bunn
Robert Burns
Salvadore Cammorano
Nick Castle
George Cooper
Annie Crawford
Frederick William Nichols Crouch
Gaetano Donizetti
Steve Drumm
Sid Dunham
Allan Dwan
Allan Dwan
Friedrich Von Flotow
Stephen Collins Foster
Peggy Gray
William Shakespeare Hays
Kenneth Holmes
T. Kennick
Olive Koenitz
Reggie Lanning
Howard Lydecker
Theodore Lydecker
Bob Mark
John Mccarthy Jr.
Herb Mendelson
Lucille Norman
Adele Palmer
James Redd
Friedrich Wilhelm Riese
Felice Romani
Anton Rubinstein
Norman Skeete
James E. Spilman
John A. Stransky Jr.
Johann Strauss
James Sullivan
Marion Dix Sullivan
Franz Von Suppé
Henry Tucker
Dick Tyler
Howard Wilson
Gerry Wright
Herbert J. Yates
Film Details
Technical Specs
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
This film's working title was Sweetheart Time. Allan Dwan and musical director Robert Armbruster had previously made the 1952 Republic musical I Dream of Jeanie (with the Light Brown Hair) (see entry above), with several of the same principal actors. Although studio publicity and the Variety review state that the film contained twenty-six songs, only those listed above were heard in the print viewed, which was complete. Although Rex Allen was originally cast in the production, an August 1952 Hollywood Reporter news item reported that Harry Carey, Jr. replaced him after Allen suffered an eye injury. Allen did, however, provide the singing voice for Carey's character. A Hollywood Reporter news item added Dorothy Peters to the cast, but her appearance in the released film has not been confirmed.