Sweetheart of Sigma Chi | |
---|---|
Directed by | Jack Bernhard |
Screenplay by | Michael Jacoby George Waggner |
Produced by | Jeffrey Bernerd |
Starring | Phil Regan Elyse Knox Ross Hunter |
Cinematography | L. William O'Connell |
Edited by | William Austin |
Music by | Edward J. Kay |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Monogram Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 76 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Sweetheart of Sigma Chi is a 1946 American musical comedy film directed by Jack Bernhard and starring Phil Regan, Elyse Knox and Ross Hunter. [1] It was produced and distributed by Monogram Pictures.
This article needs a plot summary.(January 2021) |
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Often called the most beloved and popular of college fraternity songs, "The Sweetheart of Sigma Chi" was written in 1911 by Byron D. Stokes and F. Dudleigh Vernor. Stokes had written the words while in class one June day that year, and presented them that afternoon to Vernor, who was practicing the piano in a local house, and composed the music at that time. The song has since become a favorite among ballroom orchestras and was used in two movie musicals of the same name, in 1933 and 1946. When asked about the song's inspiration, Stokes replied, "The 'Sweetheart' is the symbol for the spiritual ingredient in brotherhood. It was the Sigma Chi fraternity itself that inspired the song. I wrote the words not long after my initiation, and the magic of our Ritual with its poetic overtones and undertones was, I suppose, the source of my inspiration". The manuscript of the song remained on campus until 2007 when it was lost and not recovered.
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