Bring Your Smile Along

Last updated
Bring Your Smile Along
Bring Your Smile Along poster.jpg
Film poster
Directed by Blake Edwards
Written byBlake Edwards
Richard Quine
Produced byJonie Taps
Starring Frankie Laine
Keefe Brasselle
Constance Towers
Lucy Marlow
William Leslie
Cinematography Charles Lawton Jr.
Edited by Al Clark
Music byPaul Mason Howard
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date
  • June 22, 1955 (1955-06-22)
Running time
83 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Bring Your Smile Along is a 1955 American Technicolor comedy film by Blake Edwards. It was Edwards' directorial debut and the motion picture debut of Constance Towers. [1] Edwards wrote the script for this Frankie Laine musical with his mentor, director Richard Quine. Songs Laine sang in the film included his 1951 hit "The Gandy Dancers' Ball."

Contents

Plot

New England schoolteacher Nancy Willows leaves her school and fiancée David Parker to go to New York City for a career as a lyricist. Her neighbors across the hall are an easy going singer named Jerry Dennis and his hotheaded songwriter roommate Marty Adams who is incapable of writing acceptable lyrics for his songs.

Cast

Edwards and Quine's partnership

Quine and Edwards would subsequently write He Laughed Last for Laine. Edwards had previously written several scripts for Quine to direct: Sound Off was a 1952 service comedy starring Mickey Rooney; Rainbow 'Round My Shoulder was an earlier Laine vehicle from the same team; and All Ashore was Quine and Edwards' variation on On the Town teaming Rooney and Dick Haymes. Haymes also starred in their Cruisin' Down the River . Edwards directed second unit on Quine's Drive a Crooked Road , which cast Rooney against type and featured Quine and Edwards' script. Edwards continued working with Quine after launching his own directing career. Their latterday efforts included the early Jack Lemmon films: My Sister Eileen, Operation Mad Ball , and The Notorious Landlady . Quine and Edwards also created the short-lived sitcom The Mickey Rooney Show, and developed Rooney's 1954 spoof, The Atomic Kid , for Republic Pictures.

See also

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References

  1. "Bring Your Smile Along". afi.com. Retrieved 2024-02-02.