Shamrock Hill


1h 10m 1949

Film Details

Also Known As
Enchanted, Enchanted Dream
Genre
Musical
Release Date
Feb 1949
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Equity Pictures, Inc.
Distribution Company
Eagle-Lion Films, Inc.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 10m
Film Length
6,897ft (8 reels)

Synopsis

Atop Shamrock Hill, in the front garden of an abandoned mansion, a group of children gather to listen to their friend, Eileen Rogan, telling fanciful fairy stories. When a police officer approaches, the children scatter, but Eileen refuses to leave the hill, which she considers her second home. Eileen is arrested for trespassing, and some time later, she is summoned to court. After the judge hears all the evidence, including Eileen's testimony that she has seen and spoken to leprechauns on Shamrock Hill, he decides to dismiss the charge. The plaintiff, Ralph Judson, who plans to build a television station on Shamrock Hill, instructs his lawyer, Oliver Mathews, to do what he can to keep Eileen off his property. Later, Oliver takes his sweetheart, Judson's daughter Carol, up to the hill, where Eileen is amusing the children with another story. As they listen, Carol sees an enchanted look on Oliver's face and becomes jealous. Later, Oliver decides that he cannot in good conscience remove Eileen from the hill and gives Judson his resignation. Later, Oliver goes to Eileen's home to have dinner with her father and grandmother. Then, Eileen's old friend and invited guest, electronics engineer Larry Hadden, arrives, but Eileen tells him to go away. The next day, Larry tells Eileen that Carol promised him a job working at the new television station. Eileen becomes angry and returns home, where her grandmother advises her to ask the leprechauns what she can do to save Shamrock Hill. Eileen returns to the hill, where her spirits are lifted by the leprechauns' encouragement. Later, she goes to Judson's office to plead her case and tells him that his television station would displace the leprechauns. Judson responds by jokingly issuing a challenge: If Eileen can persuade the leprechauns to perform a miracle, he will gladly select another site for his station. Eileen leaves feeling confident and happy, and some time later, returns to the hill. There, she is amazed that all the withered potted bushes and trees have been transformed into full bloom. Thrilled, Eileen rushes to Judson's office with the news of the miracle. When Judson, Carol and Larry scoff at her claim, she convinces them to come and witness it for themselves. They all go to the hill, and Judson is initially impressed. Moments later, however, he discovers a receipt for the sale of the plants lying on the ground. Hoping to preserve Eileen's faith in the leprechauns, Carol asks her father to forget about the receipt, and Oliver affectionately kisses her. Judson then tells Eileen that he has decided upon another site for his television station, and she thanks him. After Judson and Carol leave, a worker from the nursery arrives and begins speaking with Larry. Eileen then realizes that her "miracle" was actually a gift from Larry, for which she warmly embraces him.

Film Details

Also Known As
Enchanted, Enchanted Dream
Genre
Musical
Release Date
Feb 1949
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Equity Pictures, Inc.
Distribution Company
Eagle-Lion Films, Inc.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 10m
Film Length
6,897ft (8 reels)

Articles

Peggy Ryan (1924-2004)


Peggy Ryan, the bouncing, effervescent dancer and leading lady to Donald O'Connor in a string of youth musicals during World War II, died on October 30 in Las Vegas' Sunrise Hospital from complications of a stroke. She was 80.

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)

Peggy Ryan (1924-2004)

Peggy Ryan, the bouncing, effervescent dancer and leading lady to Donald O'Connor in a string of youth musicals during World War II, died on October 30 in Las Vegas' Sunrise Hospital from complications of a stroke. She was 80. 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

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

The working titles of this film were Enchanted and Enchanted Dream. According to a December 9, 1948 Hollywood Reporter news item, Gwen O'Connor, performer Donald O'Connor's then wife, was scheduled to make her screen debut in the film, but her appearance in the final film has not been confirmed.