Two Guys from Milwaukee
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
David Butler
Dennis Morgan
Joan Leslie
Jack Carson
Janis Paige
S. Z. Sakall
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
When his train arrives at Pennsylvania Station in New York City, Balkan Prince Henry, who is determined to learn what life is like for ordinary people, slips away and is befriended by taxi driver Buzz Williams. Henry claims to be from Milwaukee, which is also Buzz's hometown. Buzz introduces Henry to boilermakers and later, invites him to his home in Brooklyn, where he lives with his sister Nan Evans and her daughter Peggy. The next morning, Henry's identity is revealed when newspaper headlines announce that he has been kidnapped. Henry explains that he intends to return before his country holds a plebescite to determine if it will become a republic. In the meantime, Buzz suggests that Henry disguise himself by shaving his mustache at the barber shop where Buzz's girl friend, Connie Read, works as a manicurist. Buzz arranges a double date with Polly, Connie's friend, for that evening and asks Connie to show Henry around the city in the meantime. By the end of the day, Connie and Henry have become attracted to each other, and she proposes that they dine alone together, rather than meet Buzz and Polly at Happy's Hash House as they had originally planned. Henry telephones his companion, Count Oswald, to bring money to Happy's to pay Buzz for his expenses from the previous night. After dinner, when Henry and Connie join Buzz, Polly and Oswald, Henry suggests they all go to the movies. To pay for his ticket, Buzz unwittingly uses the foreign money that he received from Oswald, and the theater manager calls the FBI, who follow Henry to Connie's apartment. Henry reluctantly returns with the agents to the hotel, where Oswald is waiting for him. The following morning, Peggy tells Henry that Buzz is miserably jealous and begs him to reunite Buzz and Connie. Henry then invites everyone to the hotel to hear his radio broadcast to the people of his country. While Connie tries to convince Buzz that he does not love her, Henry practices his speech. He asks Buzz for help, and Buzz speaks passionately about his love for the United States. Unknown to the men, their rehearsal is accidentally transmitted over the radio, and Buzz becomes famous. Connie is so impressed that she goes back to Buzz. The people of Henry's country are also affected by Buzz's speech and vote for a republic. Now that he is no longer a prince, Henry decides to stay in the United States and rushes to tell Connie. Both he and Buzz propose marriage to Connie, and she wavers between Buzz, whom she has known all her life, and Henry, who is new and exciting. Finally, however, Connie realizes that she has always loved Buzz. A disappointed Henry leaves for Milwaukee, where he has been offered a job with a beer company, and is temporarily distracted when he notices Lauren Bacall, his favorite movie star, is also on the plane. His excitement is cut short, however, by the appearance of her husband, Humphrey Bogart.
Director
David Butler
Cast
Dennis Morgan
Joan Leslie
Jack Carson
Janis Paige
S. Z. Sakall
Patti Brady
Rosemary Decamp
Tom D'andrea
John Ridgely
Pat Mcvey
Franklin Pangborn
Francis Pierlot
Lauren Bacall
Humphrey Bogart
Joel Fluellen
Philo Mccullough
George Reed
Creighton Hale
Marilyn Reiss
Doris Fulton
Lottie Williams
Russ Clark
Jack Mower
Donald Kerr
Antonio Filauri
Chester Clute
Tristram Coffin
Cosmo Sardo
Eddie Bruce
Jane Harker
Richard Walsh
Peggy Knudsen
Frank Marlowe
Rory Mallinson
Jody Gilbert
Douglas Carter
Lloyd Barker
Clifton Young
Howard Mitchell
Charles Knight
Charles Williams
George Campeau
Bob Lowell
Monte Blue
Ross Ford
Charles Coleman
Charles Marsh
Patricia White
Janet Barrett
Crew
Harry Barndollar
Harry Barndollar
Russell Collings
Gordon M. Davis
Paul Detlefsen
I. A. L. Diamond
Edwin Dupar
Edwin Dupar
Arthur Edeson
Leo F. Forbstein
Charles David Forrest
Alex Gottlieb
Charles Hoffman
Frederick Hollander
Felix Jacoves
Stanley Jones
Leo E. Kuter
Mario Larrinaga
James Leicester
E. Kenneth Martin
Jack Mcconaghy
Irene Morra
Thomas Morris
Leonid Raab
Leah Rhodes
Jack L. Warner
Perc Westmore
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Articles
Two Guys from Milwaukee - Two Guys From Milwaukee
In the first film, Morgan - in an unlikely bit of casting for the Wisconsin native with a Midwestern twang - plays a Balkan prince named Henry who dreams of seeing the "real" America and meeting Lauren Bacall. Still riding a wave of popularity from her sultry film debut opposite future husband Humphrey Bogart in To Have and Have Not (1944), Bacall was then one of the country's leading sex symbols. Carson plays a cabbie that coaches the prince on American manners and morals and inadvertently leads to Henry's country voting to become a democracy.
Finding himself out of a job in the film's final scene, Henry books a flight to Milwaukee with plans of becoming a beer salesman. And who should be seated next to him but the dream girl herself - Bacall! So what happens to the guy's wish fulfillment when Bogie, the ultimate tough guy, also shows up? Bogart and Bacall made their guest appearance (in what would now be called "cameos") as a lark - although the publicity didn't hurt their next co-starring vehicle, The Big Sleep (1946), which opened a month after Two Guys From Milwaukee. Although filmed immediately after To Have and Have Not, The Big Sleep had been delayed for a year and a half, making Two Guys From Milwaukee the Bogarts' second in a total of five joint screen appearances.
Producer: Alex Gottlieb
Director: David Butler
Screenplay: I.A.L. Diamond, Charles Hoffman
Art Direction: Leo K. Kuter
Costume Design: Leah Rhodes
Cinematography: Arthur Edeson
Editing: Irene Morra
Original Music: Frederick Hollander
Principal Cast: Dennis Morgan (Prince Henry), Jack Carson (Buzz Williams), Joan Leslie (Connie Reed), Janis Paige (Polly), S.Z. Sakall (Count Oswald), Patti Brady (Peggy), Rosemary DeCamp (Nan), Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall (themselves; unbilled).
BW-91m. Closed captioning.
by Roger Fristoe
Two Guys from Milwaukee - Two Guys From Milwaukee
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
The movie that the characters watch in this picture is the 1945 Warner Bros. film To Have and Have Not (see below). On August 19, 1946, actress Joan Leslie filed a $2,725,000 suit against Warner Bros., charging that the studio reduced her billing from star to featured player after she had won a suit breaking her contract (see note for The Chase above). On October 29, 1946, the studio filed an answer denying the charges and asking for dismissal of the suit with court costs. Warner Bros. argued that star billing was "optional based on merit, proficiency and drawing power."
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Summer August 17, 1946
Released in United States Summer August 17, 1946