Movie Monday: Here Come the Co-eds
By February 1945, Americans were tired of war. Yes, from newspaper articles they knew the Allies would be victorious, but it had been a long three-plus years. Hollywood understood this and released lots of comedies in addition to their melodramas and war films. Abbott and Costello flicks were among the most popular, and they starred in more than a dozen during the war.
An interesting addition to the cast of Here Come the Co-eds is Lon Chaney, Jr., but at this time he hadn’t yet played the Wolfman or the Mummy and gotten pigeon-holed into horror films. The female lead was Martha O’Driscoll, a little-remembered actress who had a highly successful career between 1937 and 1947 when she retired after marrying her second husband. O’Driscoll got her start in print advertisements. Trained in singing and dancing, she appeared in several musicals during the early part of her career. During the war, she traveled with Errol Flynn in the USO and performed for troops across the globe.
In the film, O’Driscoll, Abbott, and Costello are taxi dancers, paid dancers in a ballroom who are paidon a dance-by-dance basis. Imdb describes the plot as “two bumblers become caretakers at an all-girls’ college. During their misadventures, the duo raise money to free the school from its traditionally minded landlord.”
At one point, Costello’s character dresses in drag to join the Bixby girls’ basketball team. A fun fact is that as a high schooler, he was a gifted athlete who excelled in basketball, and according to several sources was twice the high school’s free-throw champion. He performed all the trick shots in the film.
Two comedy “routines” appear in the film. The first is the “Oyster Stew” routine where Costello attempts to eat a bowl of soup that contains an oyster that spits at him each time he tries to take a sip. This routine appears later with a frog in the Abbott and Costello movie The Wistful Widow of Wagon Gap. The second routine is “Jonah and the Whale” where Costello attempts to tell a joke he claims he wrote himself, but Abbott spills the punchline. (Wikipedia)
The pair would go on to make another twenty movies between the end of the war and 1956 before splitting in 1957.
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A Love Not Forgotten
He can’t remember. She can never forget.
Allison White should be thrilled about her upcoming wedding. The problem? She's still in love with her fiance, Chaz, who was declared dead after being shot down over Germany in 1944. Can she put the past behind her and settle down to married life with the kindhearted man who loves her?
It's been nearly two years since Charles "Chaz" Powell was shot down over enemy territory. The war is officially over, but not for him. He has amnesia as a result of injuries sustained in the crash, and the only clue to his identity is a love letter with no return address. Will he ever regain his memories and discover who he is, or will he have to forge a new life with no connections to the past?
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