Springtime in the Rockies | |
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Directed by | Irving Cummings |
Produced by |
William LeBaron William Goetz |
Written by | Walter Bullock Ken Englund Jacques Thery |
Based on |
Second Honeymoon 1936 Redbook story by Philip Wylie |
Starring |
Betty Grable John Payne Carmen Miranda Cesar Romero |
Music by | Alfred Newman |
Cinematography | Ernest Palmer |
Edited by | Robert L. Simpson |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date
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Running time
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91 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $2 million (US rentals) $240,000 (United Kingdom) |
Springtime in the Rockies is an American Technicolor musical comedy film released by Twentieth Century Fox in 1942. It stars Betty Grable, with support from John Payne, Carmen Miranda, Cesar Romero, Charlotte Greenwood, and Edward Everett Horton. Also appearing were Grable's future husband Harry James and his band. The director was Irving Cummings. The screenplay was based on the short story "Second Honeymoon" by Philip Wylie.
During the thirty-fourth week of their hit Broadway show, dancer Vicky Lane (Betty Grable) awaits the arrival of her partner, Dan Christy (John Payne), but as usual, he is late. Vicky thinks that Dan is buying her an engagement ring and is infuriated to discover that he has been on a date with socialite Marilyn Crothers.
Fed up with Dan's womanizing and insensitivity, Vicky quits the show and returns to her former dancing partner and beau, Victor Prince (Cesar Romero), who is still in love with her.
Three months pass as Dan sinks into a depression and cannot find a backer for his new show. He sits in bars, drinking by himself. His agent, "the Commissioner" (Jackie Gleason), tells him that financiers Bickel and Brown will back his show, but only if he can get Vicky to return. Dan is pessimistic, for Vicky and Victor are beginning a new engagement with Harry James and His Music Makers at the famous Lake Louise resort in the Canadian Rockies. The Commissioner tells Dan to romance Vicky so that she will come back, and not tell her about Bickel and Brown until she arrives in New York. He then asks bartender McTavish (Edward Everett Horton) to get the drunken Dan on the next plane to Lake Louise.