Monday, June 29, 2026

JAMBOREE (1957)

Grace and Lew are talent agents, once married but now divorced. Grace is shopping around young Pete Porter and Lew is doing the same for young Honey Wynn. Both singers show up at an audition for talent in a Broadway revue. When neither one gets lucky, Grace has the idea of pairing the two, like a hip Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy. They get a good song and a record contract, and as their first single heads to the top of the charts, the two fall in love. Despite their success, Grace encourages Pete to cut a solo record but he won't. Meanwhile, Lew, suspecting Grace of trying to pull such a stunt, talks Honey into recording a solo. When Grace finds out, she takes Pete to the studio and has him "accidentally" see her record which irritates him. During a TV marathon appearance, Grace cancels the duo performance and has Pete sing his own solo song. Pete and Honey split, Pete goes on a successful solo concert tour in Europe, and Honey releases her solo record which is not a hit. Everybody is sad and sorry, but because Grace and Lew had begun to feel romantic stirrings again, they work together to get the kids to reconcile at a major record industry convention. The road back proves bumpy, but a happy ending is in store for both couples.

In this 90 minute film, less than half of the running time is devoted to the above plot. The rest of the movie features performances from over a dozen pop music acts of the era, mostly presented with little to no context. Some are supposedly performed at the marathon, and most are introduced by various deejays from around the country, including Dick Clark. But all are performance bits that are not attached in any way to the narrative. Though pushed as a rock and roll movie, there are many genres represented. The opening credits mention fifteen acts, topped by Fats Domino and Jerry Lee Lewis who are bona fide rock singers, but also featured are jazz legend Count Basie and country singer Slim Whitman. Some, like Buddy Knox and Jimmy Bowen, were basically one-hit wonders. Some had no hits, like Louis Lymon and the Teenchords who were copies of Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers of "Why Do Fools Fall in Love" fame; in fact, Louis was Frankie's brother.  At least one performer, the very young Frankie Avalon, went on to fame as an actor. His song, "Teacher’s Pet," has the fun line, "As long as you rate my kiss straight A, I'm at the head of the class." For my money, the best number is the opener, "Record Hop Tonight" by Andy Martin, which is fully choreographed and presented as a scene in the Broadway revue. While it's fun to see some of these artists, most of them just stand in front of the camera and sing, and don't work up the energy of that opening. Meanwhile, the names of the actors aren't even shown in the opening credits, saved instead for the end. The plot is lazy and predictable, and the actors don't seem to have been encouraged to try too hard, but I quite liked Paul Carr as Pete and Kay Medford as Grace; both had lengthy acting careers and both are able to work up personalities for their characters—a bit nerdy for Pete, conniving for Grace. Robert Pastene (Lew) played Buck Rogers in a short-lived TV series but did little else, and Freda Holloway (Honey) made no other movies. Carr seems to do his own singing, but Connie Francis dubs Honey, with "the voice of Connie Francis" given a credit in the cast list. It’s obviously a B-level production, but it was fun, and if you have any interest in mid-50s pop music, you should check it out. Pictured are Carr and Holloway. [TCM]

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