Blondie Plays Cupid
Blondie Plays Cupid is a 1940 American comedy film starring Penny Singleton and Arthur Lake and directed by Frank R. Strayer. Also in the cast is Glenn Ford. It is the seventh of the 28 Blondie films.
Blondie Plays Cupid | |
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Directed by | Frank R. Strayer |
Produced by | Robert Sparks |
Written by | Charles M. Brown Karen DeWolf |
Starring | Penny Singleton Arthur Lake |
Music by | Leigh Harline M. W. Stoloff |
Cinematography | Henry Freulich |
Edited by | Gene Milford |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 68 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Plot summary
Dagwood Bumstead has been caught possessing illegal fireworks, and he tries to make up for this by taking his wife, Blondie, to Aunt Hannah's ranch for Fourth of July celebrations. The ranch is a peaceful place in the country, but trouble starts already on the way over there, when the Bumsteads board the wrong train and have to hitchhike most of the way.
The young couple that picks them up, Millie and Charlie, are on their way to get married and elope together, without their parents' consents. The Bumsteads have to accompany the young couple to court and the wedding ceremony, but the wedding is interrupted by Millie's father, Mr. Tucker, storming in with a shotgun.
Mr. Tucker then takes the car, with Dagwood, his son, and their dog still in it, and drives off. Charlie is forced to take Blondie to Aunt Hannah's ranch, and she encourages him to have another go at marrying Millie and elope. Unfortunately he twists his ankle on the way, and a reluctant Dagwood has to take his place and go and fetch Millie from her (and her father's) home.
Dagwood accidentally climbs through the window to Millie's father's bedroom, and is held at gunpoint. He flees head over heels and is chased around the property. His son discovers what he thinks is some kind of fireworks and lights it, but it is in fact a dynamite stick. When the dynamite explodes it rips up a hole in the ground, and in doing so, opens up an oil well.
Millie's father is so happy over the new source of income that he consents to Charlie marrying his daughter after all, and the Bumsteads finish their weekend holiday at the hospital, in peace and quiet.[1]
Cast
Actor | Role |
---|---|
Penny Singleton | Blondie Bumstead |
Arthur Lake | Dagwood Bumstead |
Larry Simms | Alexander 'Baby Dumpling' Bumstead |
Daisy | Herself |
Jonathan Hale | J.C. Dithers |
Danny Mummert | Alvin Fuddle |
Irving Bacon | Mailman |
Glenn Ford | Charlie |
Luana Walters | Millie |
Will Wright | Mr. Tucker |
Spencer Charters | Uncle Abner Henderson |
Leona Roberts | Aunt Hannah Henderson |
Stanley Brown | Ollie Shaw (uncredited) |
Mary Jane Carey | Mary, the Secretary (uncredited) |
Tommy Dixon | Saunders (uncredited) |
Jay Eaton | Kirk (uncredited) |
Richard Fiske | Nelson (uncredited) |
Si Jenks | Newton 'Newt' Banks, Justice of the Peace (uncredited) |
Charles Lane | Train Conductor (uncredited) |
Rex Moore | Newsboy (uncredited) |
John Tyrrell | Reed, a Workman (uncredited) |
References
- Memorable Films of the Forties, by John Reid
External links
- Blondie Plays Cupid on IMDb
- Blondie Plays Cupid at AllMovie
- Blondie Plays Cupid at the TCM Movie Database
- Blondie Plays Cupid at the American Film Institute Catalog