Cheerleaders Beach Party
Cheerleaders Beach Party is a 1978 comedy film by producer/director Alex E. Goitein and writer Chuck Vincent.
Cheerleaders Beach Party | |
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film poster (1978) | |
Directed by | Alex E. Goitein |
Produced by | Alex E. Goitein |
Written by | Chuck Vincent |
Starring | Elizabeth Loredan Jamie Jenson Lynn Hastings Gloria Upson |
Cinematography | Werner Hlinka |
Edited by | Enzo Bartoccioli |
Production company | Cannon Productions, Inc. |
Distributed by | Cannon Film Distributors |
Release date | September 1978 |
Running time | 85 min. |
Country |
It stars Elizabeth Loredan, Jamie Jenson, Lynn Hastings, and Gloria Upson as college cheerleaders out to save their team, the Rambling U. Rams.
It was released on DVD by Telavista in 2007.
Cast
- Elizabeth Loredan as Monica
- Jamie Jenson as Toni
- Lynn Hastings as Sissy
- Gloria Upson as Sheryl
- Rick Gitlin as Mitch Stevens
- Max Goff as Stanley Kraus
Rambling players and staff
- Mark Sarro as Bill Ubell
- John Williams as Lee Williams
- Michael Jefferson as Jim Norris
- Ray Sherry as Coach Hensen
State cheerleaders and staff
- Shoshanna Asher as Honey
- Cheri Southie as Ginger
- Malvina Golden as Sugar
- John Hart as Mr. Langley
- Robert E. Miller as Coach Wilson
- W.P. Dremak as Dean Higgins
- Joan Sumner as Mrs. Higgins
Plot
Rambling U. cheerleaders (Monica, Toni, Sissy, and Sheryl) work together to keep State U. from stealing Rambling’s star football players.
State’s Mr. Langley — on behalf of Coach Wilson — takes the players on a trip to Bell Harbor, to convince them that State has much more to offer. (better scholarships, facilities, contacts, and a more prestigious degree)
Rambling’s Coach Hensen does not see anything he can do to stop it, given Rambling’s limited resources, so the four girls take it on themselves to do whatever is required to convince the players to stay at Rambling. 1970s-era sex-comedy high jinks ensue as the girls compete with stuck-up State cheerleaders to get their players back.
The Rambling U. cheerleaders succeed by infiltrating parties and meetings with sex, disguises and drugs. Not only do they keep their players, but they recruit State's star players, Mitch Stevens and Stanley Kraus, to boot.