Twilight on the Prairie
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Jean Yarbrough
Johnny Downs
Vivian Austin
Leon Errol
Connie Haines
Eddie Quillan
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
In the small town of Little Lip, Texas, several townsmen gather to listen to a radio broadcast of western singer Bucky Williams, his partner, Ginger Lee, and his band, the Buckaroos. At the end of the show, Bucky tells his listeners that next week, the band will be broadcasting from Mammoth Studios in Hollywood, where they will be appearing in a motion picture called Twilight on the Prairie . Later, onboard a plane bound for Hollywood, the band's manager, Jackson, coaches them on their western accent, which they have lost somewhat by living in New York City. Just then, a flight attendant explains that military officers, who have been in Little Lip examining a rich mine there, have commandeered the plane for a flight back to Washington, D.C. After the plane makes an emergency landing in Little Lip, the band searches for a hotel room, but all the rooms have been taken by prospectors drawn to town by news of the mine. When the band members overhear ranch hands from the Bar "B" ranch telling the owner, Cactus Barton, that they are quitting to work in the mine, they decide to offer themselves as replacements, in the hopes of gaining housing for the night. Planning to quit the next morning after breakfast, the band checks their instruments at the telegraph office in town, then heads out to the ranch. A short time later, a townsman named Jed wanders into the telegraph office, notices the band's name on the side of the bass drum, and tells the telegraph operator, Hank, that the band is in town. Hank immediately sends a note to a local news service, which broadcasts that the Buckaroos are working for the war effort by helping to bring in the harvest. Meanwhile, at the ranch, Cactus and his daughter Sally serve dinner to the band, after which Jed and Hank arrive with their instruments and reveal the group's identity. After the band agrees to sing a song, Bucky, who is rapidly falling in love with Sally, tries to convince her that their work at the ranch is not merely a publicity stunt. The next day, Bucky receives a call from the film's producer, Mr. Gainsworth, who also mistakes their stay at the ranch for a publicity stunt and proclaims it an act of genius. Gainsworth orders them to remain at the ranch until further notice, and over the next few days, the gang exasperates Cactus with their ineptitude around the farm. Finally, a plane arrives in Little Lip to transport the band to Hollywood, further convincing Sally that their stay was only a marketing ploy. The band begins work on the picture, but a lovestruck Bucky complains to Gainsworth about the stage settings and persuades him to move the production to the ranch for location shooting. The band's return to Little Lip pleases Cactus and Sally, who are paid for the use of their ranch and receive more help to complete the harvest. That evening, after Sally prepares a barbecue for the cast and crew, she and Bucky talk in the moonlight. When Cactus sees them, he becomes impatient for their romance to bloom and orders Bucky to kiss Sally, which Bucky gladly does.
Director
Jean Yarbrough
Cast
Johnny Downs
Vivian Austin
Leon Errol
Connie Haines
Eddie Quillan
Jack Teagarden
Milburn Stone
Jimmie Dodd
Olin Howlin
Perc Launders
Dennis Moore
Ralph Peters
Eight Buckaroos
Foy Willing
The Riders Of The Purple Sage
Crew
Jerome Ash
Bernard B. Brown
Frankie Brown
Clyde Bruckman
Charles Carroll
Everett Carter
Jimmie Dodd
Redd Evans
Fred R. Feitshans Jr.
Russell A. Gausman
Don George
John B. Goodman
Abraham Grossman
Oakley Haldeman
Vic Knight
Gene De Paul
Lew Porter
Don Raye
E. R. Robinson
Milton Rosen
Jack Teagarden
Brenda Weisberg
Vera West
Foy Willing
Warren Wilson
Warren Wilson
Joseph E. Winner
Mack Wright
Film Details
Technical Specs
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
The working title of this film was Song of the Plains. Jack Teagarden is listed twice in the cast credits, first with his character name, "Jackson," then as "Jack Teagarden and His Orchestra."