The Vanguard is a small jazz club run as a co-op by a group of young musicians who sing and play in a combo there. Businesswoman Jo Helton visits the place with her lackey of a lawyer (Justin Smith). She wants to buy the place to tear it down and replace it with an office building, but Rod Lauren, a singer, emcee, and co-owner (pictured at left), won't sell, saying the place is just starting to turn a profit. Smith tells Helton that the kids have a lease, and as she leaves on a business trip, she tells him to use strong arm tactics, like finding safety violations, to get the building for herself. Her niece (Molly Bee), who has just turned 21, goes to the club one night with her obnoxious boyfriend who gets in a fistfight with Rod and leaves, letting Molly and Rod do a little bonding, especially when the electricity is turned off and Rod discovers that Molly can sing—we find out later that her mother was a USO singer who was killed in a plane crash. Knowing that Smith is trying to close the club, Molly takes a job there. When Helton returns and hears her sing, she is brought to tears by how much Molly sounds like her mother, and she starts to soften her stance about the lease. But then a faulty wiring problem, which the safety inspector had pointed out, causes a fire which destroys the club. Will Rod and the gang be ruined? Will Molly and her aunt manage to reforge their relationship?
I have a mild thing for Rod Lauren. He's not a great actor (though he can sing and even had a top 40 hit in 1960) but he has a mildly smoldering and sullen look that he puts to good use in the handful of B-movies he made, most notably the cheapie cult classic THE CRAWLING HAND. Here, his sullenness reads as broody determination which works for the movie. Its title is a bit misleading as there is not any real swinging done by anyone. The music, however, is OK. Though the combo is lightly jazzy, the rest of the numbers are either pop or folk. The front of the club has a sign announcing a Hootenanny night, but aside from two bland folky songs performed by the Sherwood Singers we see no hootenannying going on. Rod and Molly Bee (who was a country singer) each get a song, as does R&B singer Gene McDaniels who plays one of the club owners. Jo Helton gives an odd performance as the mean aunt. It's interesting that, as other viewers have pointed out, her role as a tough businessperson villain is usually played by an older man. Helton was only 30 here, though she does look a little older. But her facial expression for most of the movie is a glare of smirky irritation and it does get tiring. Even as she starts to melt a bit near the end, she still mostly smirks. I didn’t like her at first, but eventually I started to make a game out of being able to catch her without that smirk. I don't think I ever did. This short B-film has an airless TV episode feel to it, even in the jazz club. An actor named Larrs Jackson plays another owner who sings a comic novelty song which includes an impression of Walter Brennan; the actor is billed as Jack Larson, but he is not the better known Jack Larson who played Jimmy Olsen in the Superman TV series. Should you watch this? Well, it's short and predictable so as B-movie comfort fodder, maybe. Otherwise, only for fellow fans of Rod Lauren. [YouTube]












