That's the Spirit


1h 27m 1945

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Musical
Release Date
Jun 15, 1945
Premiere Information
New York opening: 1 Jun 1945
Production Company
Universal Pictures Company, Inc.
Distribution Company
Universal Pictures Company, Inc.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 27m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
8,382ft (10 reels)

Synopsis

In the early 1900s, pompous New York banker Jasper Cawthorne fires Miss Preble, a dressmaker, when he learns that she makes clothes for "show people," as well as for his wife Abigail, his daughter Libby and his niece Patience. Intrigued by the forbidden, Libby and Patience sneak into the Majestic Theatre, where Libby attracts the attention of a vaudeville magician, Steve "Slim" Gogarty. The two quickly fall in love, and when Libby overhears her father's plans to have the police raid the vaudeville theater, she places herself in a compromising position in Steve's dressing room. Finding his daughter there, Japser demands that the two marry immediately. Later, the now married Libby is dangerously near death after the birth of a daughter Sheila, and Steve prays aloud that if someone must die, he be taken in her place. The Angel of Death hears Steve's pleas and takes him instead. After serving an eighteen-year probation period, Steve is allowed to return to Earth for seven days as a ghost, in order to help his wife and daughter overcome the dominance of Jasper and prove that he did not leave Libby for another woman. After livening up Jasper's stuffy party with his magic flute, Steve takes Sheila, the only person who can see and hear him, to the Majestic. There, she sees meets and falls in love with Martin Wilde, Jr., the son of the theater's owner and Steve's best friend. Seeing the two dancing together, Martin, Sr. offers Sheila a job in his show, which she accepts with her mother's blessings. Learning this, Jasper tries to send Sheila to a private girls' school, but Libby stands up to her father and insists that Sheila be "allowed to live her own life." Jasper then buys the demand note on Martin's theater, but agrees not to insist on immediate payment if Sheila is fired. Steve uses his magic flute to return Jasper and Martin, Sr. to child-like states. Libby collapses during the ensuing family argument and is ordered to go to Florida for her health. When Jasper makes good on his threat to close the theater, Abigail secretly gives Martin the money to reopen it. Jasper then arrives at the theater on opening night with a court order to remove Sheila from the state, only to be told off backstage by his wife, niece and even his servants. Having a change of heart, Jasper then agrees to co-finance the show with Abigail. As the engaged Sheila and Martin, Jr. perform their final number of the show, Jasper receives a telegram, informing him that Libby has died, and her spirit joins Steve in the balcony. The two watch the show end, then ascend to Heaven.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Musical
Release Date
Jun 15, 1945
Premiere Information
New York opening: 1 Jun 1945
Production Company
Universal Pictures Company, Inc.
Distribution Company
Universal Pictures Company, Inc.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 27m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
8,382ft (10 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 film opens with the following written foreword: "This is New York in the days when a little flower was a petunia and not the mayor!" The reference was to Fiorello LaGuardia, nicknamed "The Little Flower," who served as mayor of New York from 1934 to 1945. The onscreen credit for Michael Fessier and Ernest Pagano reads: "Original screenplay written and produced by." According to modern sources, the inscription on Jack Oakie's tombstone, "In a simple double-take, thou hast more than voice e'er spake," was written by That's the Spirit co-star Gene Lockhart. Modern sources also state that That's the Spirit was the favorite film of actresses Peggy Ryan and June Vincent.