Give Out, Sisters
Cast & Crew
Edward F. Cline
The Andrews Sisters
Grace Mcdonald
Dan Dailey Jr.
Charles Butterworth
Walter Catlett
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
When Peggy, a Western Union messenger, learns that the Flamingo nightclub is interested in adding new acts to its show, which currently features the Andrews Sisters and Bob Edwards' orchestra, she convinces club owner Harrison to give her friends an audition, in the hopes that they might be able to save their financially troubled dance school. At the audition, Kendall, Harrison's press agent, recognizes the lead dancer as Grace Waverly, the niece of millionaire sisters Agatha, Blandina and Susan Waverly. He takes the heiress' photograph and rushes it to his newspaper connections. After the picture appears in the papers, Harrison immediately signs the dancing group, and gives Professor Chester Woolf, the owner of the dance school, a $500 advance. The old professor uses the money to pay off his debt to Batterman, his costumer. The spinster Waverly sisters, meanwhile, learn of their niece's actions and order her to quit dancing, while their attorney warns Harrison not to try to enforce Grace's contract. Gribble, Woolf's dishonest partner, then has the Andrews Sisters dress up as the Waverly sisters and sneaks them into the millionaires' home. While Woolf, pretending to be a doctor, administers to the sisters upstairs, the disguised Andrews Sisters meet with Harrison and give their consent to their "niece's" dancing. The Waverly sisters discover the ruse and rush to the Flamingo club to confront the tricksters. They arrive before the Andrews Sisters have a chance to change their clothes, and in the ensuing confusion, both sets of "Waverly" sisters take the stage. When the real Waverly sisters discover that they enjoy dancing, they decide to give their consent to Grace's career. At the same time, the constantly quarreling Bob and Grace finally discover their true affection for each other.
Director
Edward F. Cline
Cast
The Andrews Sisters
Grace Mcdonald
Dan Dailey Jr.
Charles Butterworth
Walter Catlett
William Frawley
Edith Barrett
Marie Blake
Fay Helm
Emmett Vogan
Leonard Carey
Richard Davies
Irving Bacon Dr. Howard
The Jivin' Jacks And Jills:
Bobby Scheerer
Tommy Rall
Roland Dupree
Joseph "corky" Geil
Dorothy Babb
Jane Mcnab
Jean Mcnab
Dolores Mitchell
Peggy Ryan
Donald O'connor
Leon Belasco
Robert Emmett Keane
Lorin Raker
Duke York
Alphonse Martell
Emmett Smith
Fred "snowflake" Toones
Crew
Robert Boyle
Bernard B. Brown
Bernard W. Burton
Howard Christie
Gwynne Denni
Lucien Denni
Walter Donaldson
Lloyd French
R. A. Gausman
J. Andrew Gilmore
Ray Gold
Paul Landres
Lester Lee
Albert Lerner
Zeke Manners
John Mattison
Paul Neal
Jack Otterson
Charles Previn
Fred Rath
Sid Robin
George Robinson
Lee Sands
Vic Schoen
Paul Gerard Smith
Roy Stillwell
Vera West
Warren Wilson
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Peggy Ryan (1924-2004)
Born Margaret O'Rene Ryan on August 28, 1924, in Long Beach, California, Ryan began dancing professionally as a toddler in her parents' vaudeville act, the Dancing Ryans, and was discovered by George Murphy when she was 12. Murphy arranged for young Peggy to dance with him in the Universal musical Top of the Town (1937). She would go on to make a few more film appearances over the next few years - the most striking of which as a starving, homeless girl in John Ford's The Grapes of Wrath (1940) - yet for the most part, she was hardly noticeable apart from a few dance numbers.
Her luck changed when Universal cast her opposite another teenage hoofer, Donald O'Connor in What's Cookin'? (1942). From then on, they teamed in a series of innocuous musicals that were low on production values, but high on youthful pluck. Just check out some of their titles: Private Buckaroo, Give Out, Sisters!, Get Hep to Love (all 1942); Top Man, Mr. Big (both 1943); Chip Off the Old Block, This Is the Life, and Bowery to Broadway (all 1944). They may have not been high art, but jitterbuggin' kids loved it, and given the low investment Universal put into these pictures, they turned quite the profit.
Her career slowed down after the war. In 1945, she married songwriter James Cross, and didn't return to films until 1949, when she made two minor musicals that year: Shamrock Hill, There's a Girl in My Heart. She divorced Cross in 1952 and met her second husband, dancer Ray McDonald, in her final film appearance, a forgettable musical with Mickey Rooney, All Ashore (1953). Tragically, McDonald died in 1957 after a food choking incident, and the following year, Ryan moved to Honolulu after marrying her third husband, Honolulu Advertiser columnist Eddie Sherman. She kept herself busy teaching dance classes at the University of Hawaii, but in 1969, she found herself back in front of the camera as Jenny Sherman, secretary to Detective Steve McGarrett (Jack Lord) on the long-running show Hawaii Five-O,. She played the role for seven years, remaining until 1976.
Eventually, Ryan relocated with her husband to Las Vegas, where for the last few years, she was teaching tap dancing to a whole new generation of hoofers. She is survived by her son, Shawn; daughter Kerry; and five grandchildren.
by Michael T. Toole
Peggy Ryan (1924-2004)
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
The working titles of this film were I Want to Dance and Want to Dance? This was the first producing assignment for Bernard W. Burton, who had previously worked as an editor at Universal. The songs "Pennsylvania Polka" and "The New Generation" were significant hits for the Andrews Sisters.