| Juke Girl | |
|---|---|
| | |
| Directed by | Curtis Bernhardt |
| Screenplay by | A. I. Bezzerides |
| Story by | Theodore Pratt |
| Produced by | Jack Saper Jerry Wald |
| Starring | Ann Sheridan Ronald Reagan Richard Whorf |
| Cinematography | Bert Glennon |
| Edited by | Warren Low |
| Music by | Adolph Deutsch |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date |
|
Running time | 90 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Box office | $1.1 million (US rentals) [1] |
Juke Girl is a 1942 American drama film directed by Curtis Bernhardt, written by A. I. Bezzerides, and starring Ann Sheridan and Ronald Reagan. The supporting cast includes Richard Whorf, George Tobias, Gene Lockhart, Alan Hale Sr., Howard Da Silva, Donald MacBride, Faye Emerson, Willie Best, and Fuzzy Knight. The plot focuses on the plight of exploited farmers and farmworkers in the South. [2]
"Shapely Ann Sheridan is starred with Ronald Reagan in the story of a dime-a-dance girl who discovers her veneer of hardness is not so solid as she had thought." [3]
Farm workers Steve and Danny seek jobs in the fields surrounding Cattail, Florida, a small town where businessman Henry Madden runs just about everything. This includes Muckeye John's Club, the area's principal amusement center. Madden also owns a big packing plant, the town's largest source of jobs. Madden uses strong-arm tactics to prevent local farmers from selling their crops directly to anyone but himself -- and usually on consignment. Danny likes Madden's set-up. He gets a job at the plant and soon moves up the organization's ladder. But Steve, who was raised on a small Kansas farm, refuses to work for Madden, a man who takes every possible advantage of the plight suffered by farmers during the Great Depression.
Steve meets and falls in love with Lola Mears, a "juke girl" employed at Muckeye's. They befriend farmer Nick Garcos, a hard-working Greek immigrant who bucks Madden's monopoly by selling his crops directly to an Atlanta food distributor. This small revolt is almost foiled by Madden's henchmen, but Steve deliberately stalls one of Nick's hired trucks at the distributor's only entrance gate. He refuses to move the vehicle until a deal for Nick's entire crop is completed. This daring strategy works, and Nick, for the first time in his life, is a successful farmer. Upon his return to Cattail, Nick celebrates his victory over Madden at Muckeye's, where he becomes completely pie-eyed.
Feeling good about everything and everyone, he approaches Madden, who is working on his books alone at the plant. Nick's intention is to befriend his old antagoist, but Madden will have none of it. He tells Nick to leave the premises. Nick refuses. In the fight that inevitably results, Nick is accidently killed by Madden, who then attempts to frame Steve and Lola for murder. Madden's guilt, however, is uncovered, resulting in the arrest and certain imprisonment of the area's biggest employer. As a result, Cattail is no longer the boom town it once was. Steve and Lola, along with Madden's ex-employees, decide to pack up and resume their lives elsewhere.
The picture was released a month after the classic Kings Row , which also starred Sheridan and Reagan as a couple.