Reveille with Beverly

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Reveille with Beverly
File:1943 - Midway Theater Ad - 29 Apr MC - Allentown PA.jpg
Newspaper advertisement
Directed by Charles Barton
Produced by Sam White
Written by Howard J. Green
Jack Henley
Albert Duffy
Based on Reveille with Beverly
1941-44 radio show
by Jean Ruth[1]
Starring Ann Miller
William Wright
Dick Purcell
Music by John Leipold
Cinematography Philip Tannura
Edited by James Sweeney
Production
company
Columbia Pictures
Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corporation
Release dates
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  • February 4, 1943 (1943-02-04)
Running time
78 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $40,000 (estimated)
Box office $2,100,000 (USA)

Reveille with Beverly is a 1943 American musical film starring Ann Miller, Franklin Pangborn, and Larry Parks directed by Charles Barton, released by Columbia Pictures, based on the Reveille with Beverly radio show hosted by Jean Ruth.[2] It is also the name of the subsequent soundtrack album.

The film featured a number of notable guest appearances by such important big band era musicians as Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Frank Sinatra, The Mills Brothers, Bob Crosby, Freddie Slack, and Ella Mae Morse.

In his narration for the 1977 documentary film Life Goes to War, Johnny Carson remarked that while he was stationed on Guam during World War II, he had "memorized the entire score—and most of the dialogue—of Reveille with Beverly".

Plot

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Beverly Ross wants to be a radio personality, but has to run the switchboard at a local station. The blustery station owner Mr. Kennedy wants no part of programming the "jive that she loves", preferring the classics.[3] She sends the pompous early-morning personality Vernon Lewis away for a vacation, so she can transform his dull classical-music program into a jive session. She invites suggestions and requests, and is swamped by mail from soldiers. She now devotes her show to the military, and the program becomes a success as "Reveille with Beverly." Much of the film consists of musical numbers, visually representing the records she plays. The thin storyline connecting the songs concerns itself with Beverly and Lewis vying for control of the show, resulting in Beverly constantly leaving and returning to her old job at a record store.

Cast

Soundtrack

References

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External links