By Ed Garea
Sweetheart
of the Campus (Columbia, 1941) - Director: Edward
Dmytryk. Writers: Robert H. Andrews & Edmund L. Hartman (s/p).
Cast: Ruby Keeler, Ozzie Nelson, Harriet Hilliard, Gordon Oliver, Don
Beddoe, Charles Judels, Kathleen Roward, Byron Foulger, George
Lessey, Frank Gaby, Zoot Watson, & Four Spirits of Rhythm. B&W,
70 minutes.
This
little programmer from Columbia is notable only for two items: it’s
Ozzie and Harriet’s first movie pairing, and it’s Ruby Keeler’s
last film. Other than that, the rest is filler. Bad filler.
Ozzie
Norton (Nelson) and his band are about to open in a new nightclub
near the campus of Lambeth Technological Institute. Ozzie’s
featured attraction is dancer Betty Blake (Keeler), who’s in love
with Ozzie (naturally). A dancer fronting a big band? Oh, well.
Rehearsal
goes well, with Betty tapping away to a lame song, but then the party
is interrupted by the presence of Mrs. Minnie Lambert Sparr (Howard),
accompanied by a cast that includes the sheriff (Beddoes) and Harriet
Hale (Hilliard), the daughter of Dr. Hale (Lessey), a professor at
the college. Sparr, the head of the college, insists the joint be
closed because it violates a state law forbidding the establishment
of such a club within five miles of the campus. She tells the sheriff
to padlock the place.
Lest
we think that Mrs. Sparr is your typical puritanical battleax, it
seems she has an ulterior motive in mind, as exposed by Harriet Hale.
Under the terms of her late brother’s will, the land on which the
college sits will revert to Mrs. Sparr if the enrollment drops below
300 students. Her plan is to turn the college into a girls’
seminary.
Not
taking this lying down, Ozzie and the band lead a protest match, but
are jailed by the sheriff for their troubles. Harriet visits them
while in jail and lets them know not only that she’s on their side,
spilling the beans about Mrs. Sparr, but that she has a plan. Yes, a
plan. She proposes they all enroll at the college to boost
enrollment. The band’s publicist, Terry Jones (Oliver) sees this as
a great publicity stunt, and builds a publicity campaign around the
fact that Betty is the only co-ed at the college.
They
begin by preempting the college television station and performing a
number with Harriet singing. When Harriet and the guys decide to turn
an abandoned gym into a nightclub, the Battleax protests. But Harriet
outmaneuvers the old goat by describing it as a commissary with
music. The resulting publicity has attracted a bevy of co-eds and a
traveling football team. By this time Ozzie now has a weekly show on
the college station featuring the warbling of Harriet.
Not
to be outdone, Mrs. Sparr insists that all new students take a series
of examinations administered by the strict Dr. Bailey (Foulger). But
Betty manages to pass, mainly by flattering Dr. Bailey. But though
she’s won the battle, she loses the war, as Ozzie declares his love
for Harriet. Miffed, Betty decides to take an offer on Broadway, but
before she leaves, Terry declares that he’s fallen in love with
her.
Betty
becomes a smash hit on Broadway, and as the Battleax eagerly awaits
the end of term so she can take over the place, Betty suddenly
arrives with a bevy of new students she has recruited from her
admirers. She also announces her intention to remain on campus, and
Terry kisses her at the end.
As
mentioned before, Sweetheart of the Campus is a
serviceable, if not spectacular, programmer; the sort that keeps the
audience entertained while awaiting the main feature, but not good
enough to overshadow it. The plot, though clichéd, is pleasant
enough, and the songs listenable if not memorable. As also mentioned
before, it was the first film in which both Ozzie and Harriet
co-starred. Some fans were of the mistaken belief that this was where
they met, but in truth they’d been married since 1935. In three
years, they would begin The Ozzie and Harriet Show on
radio and segue over to television in the ‘50s, where they would
compete with Ward and June Clever for the title of America’s
favorite white bread couple.
This
was, indeed, Keeler’s last movie. Having come over to Columbia from
RKO, this was her only movie for Columbia, and, after seeing the
contents, decided that she didn’t have to be an archeologist to
read the handwriting on the wall. Her tempestuous marriage to Al
Jolson had ended in 1940, and she had married second (and last)
husband, John Homer Lowe in 1941. It was just as well, for Keeler’s
success at Warner’s was based on two items: her charisma and her
marriage to Jolson, who Warner’s had signed with huge expectations.
Speaking about her days at Warner Brothers, she was forthright when
she said, “It's really amazing. I couldn't act. I had that terrible
singing voice, and now I can see I wasn't the greatest tap dancer in
the world, either.” The entertainment world would not see Ruby
again until 1971, when she starred in the Broadway revival of No,
No, Nanette, directed by none other than Busby Berkeley.
Aside
from the stars, the most interesting thing about the film is the look
it gives us into the very early days of television, via the “campus
television station.” NBC had started to broadcast television in New
York City in 1939, but the effort was placed on hiatus during the
war.
Also,
don’t blink when the football teams arrives on campus, or you may
just miss Alan Hale, Jr. in an early role as one of the players.
Notable
Dialogue
Betty
Blake (Keeler): “Ozzie and Harriet, Ozzie and Harriet, Ozzie and
Harriet - you say it like they go together like ham and eggs!”
Ironic
Dialogue
During
the film, Betty Blake takes Harriet Hale (Hilliard) aside to give her
advice about marriage. The former Mrs. Al Jolson tells the present
and future Mrs. Ozzie Nelson, “Being
married to someone more famous than you are isn’t all it’s
cracked up to be.” Truer words were never spoken.
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