True to the Army
Cast & Crew
Albert S. Rogell
Judy Canova
Allan Jones
Ann Miller
Jerry Colonna
William Demarest
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Private Bill Chandler, also known as "Broadway Bill," has abandoned New York theater to enlist in the Army, where he now produces morale-boosting plays at Fort Bray. At a nearby circus, tightrope walker Daisy Hawkins witnesses the murder of the circus owner by the Drake gang. Although Drake is arrested, his gang plans to kill Daisy so that she cannot testify against him. Daisy escapes to hide with her boyfriend, Private J. Wethersby "Pinky" Fothergill, the official pigeoneer stationed at Fort Bray. Still in costume, Daisy first stumbles into one of Bill's auditions, for which the soldiers are dressed as women, and he assumes that she is yet another masquerading soldier. Because she seems to be the only talented singer, Bill agrees to help hide Daisy. Bill and Pinky cut her hair, give her a soldier's uniform and call her "Private Omstock," and Daisy soon becomes the hit of her unit because she is a sharpshooter. Bill, in the meantime, meets the commanding officer's beautiful daughter, Vicki Marlow, and discovers that she is a talented singer and tapdancer. However, Colonel Marlow refuses to allow her in the show. When Drake's thugs send a man posing as a police detective to the fort, Marlow arranges an all-out search for Daisy. Daisy successfully continues her ruse until one night, when her well-meaning unit soldiers take her to a local nightclub, she gets drunk and starts to apply makeup. When Drake's thugs try to take her away, the soldiers pick a fight with them, during which Daisy escapes. By the time of the show, Bill and Vicki have fallen in love while secretly rehearsing Vicki's numbers. Marlow is initially dismayed to see his daughter onstage until he receives the approbation of his commanding officers. Bill has arranged for the police to infiltrate the theater, hoping that Daisy's appearance onstage will lure the gangsters out in public. During Pinky's magic act, the thugs shoot at Daisy using silencers, but their aim is off. However, Daisy's aim never falters during her sharpshooting act, and in the next dance she shoots the guns out of the gangsters' hands. The gangsters are arrested, and Bill proposes to Vicki during the finale.
Director
Albert S. Rogell
Cast
Judy Canova
Allan Jones
Ann Miller
Jerry Colonna
William Demarest
Clarence Kolb
William Wright
Edward Pawley
Edwin Miller
Arthur Loft
Gordon Jones
Rod Cameron
Eddie Acuff
Edgar Dearing
John Miljan
Mary Treen
Selmer Jackson
Al Hill
Frank Hagney
Max Wagner
Frank Sully
Harry Barris
Russell Mercer
James Mercer
Conrad Wiedell
Walter Fenner
Gladden James
Reed Porter
Frank Marlowe
Howard Hickman
Lloyd Whitlock
Billy Wayne
Ralph Dunn
Ralph Peters
Stanley Blystone
Syd Saylor
Joseph Crehan
Lyle Latell
Blanche Grady
Barbara Slater
Lynda Grey
Fredric M. Santley
Joseph Devlin
Cliff Clark
Bob Mckenzie
George Turner
Frank Bruno
Dorothy Sebastian
Jerry Maren
Charlotte V. Sullivan
Jimmy
Coco
Crew
Art Arthur
Val Burton
Hans Dreier
Daniel Fapp
Dorothy Fields
William Flannery
Alvin Ganzer
Edmund Hartmann
Frank Loesser
Alma Macrorie
Jimmy Mchugh
Harry Mills
Walter Oberst
Bradford Ropes
Jules Schermer
Sol C. Siegel
Harold Spina
Curly Twifford
Victor Young
Film Details
Technical Specs
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
The working titles of this film were Sergeant Yoo-Hoo and Private Yoo Hoo. A Hollywood Reporter news item indicates that writer Arthur Lewis worked on the screenplay; however, the extent of his contribution to the final film has not been determined. The performance scene was shot at the Biltmore Theater in Los Angeles, CA. Paramount's 1934 film She Loves Me Not was based on the same sources, and was directed by Elliott Nugent and starred Bing Crosby and Miriam Hopkins (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1931-40; F3.4008).
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1942
Released in United States 1942