The Bashful Bachelor | |
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Chester Lauck in the film
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Directed by |
Malcolm St. Clair Charles Kerr (assistant) |
Produced by | Jack William Votion |
Written by |
Chester Lauck (story) and Norris Goff (story) Chandler Sprague (screenplay) |
Cinematography | Paul Ivano |
Edited by | W. Duncan Mansfield |
Distributed by | RKO Pictures |
Release date
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Running time
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78 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $165,000 (estimated) |
Box office | $675,000 (USA) |
The Bashful Bachelor is a 1942 American film directed by Malcolm St. Clair. It was the second film in the Lum and Abner film series.
Small town store owner Lum Edwards (Chester Lauck) in Pine Ridge has a thorn in his side because his partner in the Jot-em-Down general store, Abner Peabody (Norris Goff), has exchanged the store delivery car for a race track horse. And because Lum doesn't have the guts to grab the woman he is in love with, Geraldine (ZaSu Pitts), and propose to once and for all, he lays a complex scheme to impress her in a fake "rescue" mission. He fails tremendously in this mission, and nearly gets everyone killed in doing so. However, he doesn't give up, but tries again, and finally succeeds in impressing her. His problems aren't over though, since his proposal, who was to be delivered to Geraldine by his partner Abner, ends up in the wrong hands when it is delivered to a very prone bachelorette, Widder Abernathy (Constance Purdy) instead. She jumps at the possibility of marrying Lum, and the game is afoot. Lum doesn't get out of trouble until the town sheriff (Irving Bacon) finds widow Widder's disappeared husband.