Freshman Love

Freshman Love
Directed by William McGann
Produced by Bryan Foy
Screenplay by Earl Felton
George Bricker
Based on The College Widow (1904 play)
by George Ade
Starring Patricia Ellis
Frank McHugh
Music by Leo F. Forbstein
Cinematography Sidney Hickox
Edited by James Gibbon
Distributed by Warner Brothers
Release date
January 18, 1936; 7 reels
Running time
65 minutes
Country USA
Language English

Freshman Love is a 1936 sound film based on George Ade's oft filmed play The College Widow, adaptations of which were filmed twice previously, in 1915 and 1927. This version is directed by William McGann and is a comedy-musical starring Patricia Ellis.[1]

This is Lloyd Bridges' first film.

A print is preserved at the Library of Congress.[2]

Plot

Male students are tricked into joining Billings College's rowing team when the coach, Speed Hammond, is able to persuade the school president's attractive daughter, Joan Simpkins, to recruit them.

Bob Wilson is one of the rowers, but due to a problem with his grades, he ends up enrolling under a phony name. Adversaries try everything, even music, to distract the Billings crew during the big race, but the team holds on for victory.


Cast

uncredited

  • Lloyd Bridges
  • William Carey
  • Virginia Dabney - Co-Ed
  • Don Downen - Second Goof
  • Jerry Fletcher - Leader of Tango Band
  • Tommy Hicks - College Boy
  • Robert Emmett Keane - Announcer
  • Joe King - Terry Biddle
  • Edmund Mortimer - Henderson
  • George Noisom - Harmonica Player
  • Broderick O'Farrell - Member of Board of Trustees
  • Peter Potter - Vindicator Editor
  • Dick Purcell - Radio Announcer
  • Harry Seymour - Oggi's Barker
  • Michael Stuart - Third Goof
  • Fred "Snowflake" Toones - Mose
  • Ruth Warren - Marie, Housemother
  • Jack Wise - Oggi's Attendant
  • Sam Wolfe - Harmonica Player
  • Jane Wyman - Co-Ed

References

  1. The AFI Catalog of Feature Films: Freshman Love
  2. Catalog of Holdings, The American Film Institute Collection and The United Artists Collection at The Library of Congress, c.1978 pub. by The American Film Institute


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