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| Thousands Cheer was an American musical-comedy released by MGM in 1943. Produced at the height of the Second World War, the film was intended as a morale booster for American troops and their families. The movie is essentially a two-part program. The first half consists of a romantic comedy storyline involving an aerialist played by Gene Kelly who is drafted into the US Army but really wants to join the air force. During training, he falls in love with Kathryn (played by Kathryn Grayson), the daughter of his commanding officer, who has similarly put her singing career on hold in order to serve in the military and provide entertainment for the troops. Unusually for this type of a film (and for this era of Hollywood), the character Kathryn has only recently met her father for the first time since she was a baby, her parents having divorced. A related subplot has Kathryn conniving to get her parents (played by John Boles and Mary Astor) to reconcile. During the first part of the film, Grayson sings several numbers and Kelly performs one of his most famous routines, dancing with a mop as a partner. The secondary plot involves preparations for a major live show for the soldiers which will feature many MGM musical and comedy stars. For the second half of the film, all pretences of a storyline are effectively abandoned as the film instead becomes a variety showcase of comedy, song, and dance, with all of the performers (save Kelly and Grayson) appearing as themselves. The show portion is hosted by Mickey Rooney. Performing as "guest stars" in the film's show segment were: Judy Garland, Lena Horne, Red Skelton, Ann Sothern, Lucille Ball, Frank Morgan, Virginia O'Brien, Eleanor Powell, Marilyn Maxwell, Margaret O'Brien, June Allyson, the Kay Kyser Orchestra and others. Highlights included a performance of "Honeysuckle Rose" by Horne, a tap dance solo by Powell (making her first color film and her final MGM movie until 1950's Duchess of Idaho), Kay Kyser's band delivering a frantic and humorous medley of "I Dug a Ditch in Wichita"/"Should I?", and a Garland performance of "The Joint is Really Jumpin' in Carnegie Hall" which includes an early use of the word "rock" in a musical sense. "I Dug a Ditch in Wichita", a song told from the point of view of a soldier who used to dig ditches, is the movie's underlying theme song, performed several times in the film with different arrangements and approaches, climaxing in the above mentioned Kay Kyser performance. Kathryn Grayson also sings a version, using an exaggerated (and out-of-character) "cowboy" accent. After a brief resumption (and resolution) of the earlier storyline, the film ends with Grayson leading an international chorus of men (the United Nations Chorus) in a song pleading for world peace. The song, entitled "United Nations", actually predates the establishment of the United Nations political body by two years. Trivia
[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Thousands Cheer ] Some related entries: The Terror | Happy ending | Batman Fights Dracula | Padre Padrone | Angela's Ashes | Hedgehog in the Fog | The Bible: In The Beginning | Pigeon Boy | All Dogs Go to Heaven 2 | Oru Vadakkan Veeragatha | Stuck in the Suburbs This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Thousands Cheer; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay |
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