Four_Jills_in_a_Jeep

<i>Four Jills in a Jeep</i>

Four Jills in a Jeep

1944 film by William A. Seiter


Four Jills in a Jeep is a 1944 American comedy-drama musical film starring Kay Francis, Carole Landis, Martha Raye and Mitzi Mayfair as themselves, reenacting their USO tour of Europe and North Africa during World War II.

Quick Facts Four Jills in a Jeep, Directed by ...

Plot

Cast

Production

The working titles of the film were Command Performance and Camp Show.[1]

The film is based on the actual experiences of Kay Francis, Carole Landis, Martha Raye and Mitzi Mayfair, members of the Feminine Theatrical Task Force who left the United States on October 16, 1942, and performed several shows per day for American and British troops in England, Ireland and North Africa. They also presented a command performance for the queen of the United Kingdom.[1]

After leaving England, the women spent three weeks in North Africa, the first USO tour of that area. Francis and Mayfair then returned to the United States. Landis returned to England to join her husband. As depicted in the film, Landis met U.S. Army Air Forces pilot Capt. Thomas C. Wallace in England in November 1942 and married him on January 5, 1943. The couple divorced in July 1945. Raye continued touring, and her association with the USO endured through the American wars in Korea and Vietnam.[1]

Landis and Edwin Seaver wrote a book about her travels while the film was in preproduction. Although Landis's material was not used in the screenplay, the studio permitted her to share the title her book with that of the film for the publicity value. Her book was published in 1944, first as a serial in The Saturday Evening Post. While the film is based on the experiences of all four women, only Mayfair and Francis contributed directly to the screenplay.[1]

Islin Auster was originally scheduled to produce the film. An August 1943 news account noted that Jack Oakie had been cast for the comedy lead role and that Cornel Wilde was being considered for "the juvenile spot."[1]

Studio head Darryl F. Zanuck asked director William A. Seiter to limit Raye's often loud and frenetic screen presence. She was scheduled to sing her own composition "Jeep, Jeep, Listen to the Soldiers Sing," but the song does not appear in the film.[1]

The film marked the screen debut of singer Dick Haymes. It was Francis's first film appearance since the 1942 Universal production Between Us Girls. Mayfair had not appeared in a feature film since the 1930 musical Paramount on Parade, and Four Jills in a Jeep was her last screen appearance. Dance director Don Loper was borrowed from MGM for the production.[1]

Landis, Raye and Mayfair also planned to appear in a short film recreating their act to be shown to troops.[1]

Reception

In a contemporary review for The New York Times, critic Bosley Crowther wrote: "It gives the painful impression of having been tossed together in a couple of hours. All that happens, really, is a lot of dizzying about the dames and some singing and dancing by them in an undistinguished style."[2]

See also


References

  1. "Four Jills in a Jeep (1944)". American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures. April 6, 1944.
  2. Crowther, Bosley (1944-04-06). "The Screen: Four Jills in a Jeep". The New York Times. p. 27.

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