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Juke Joint (1947 film)

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Director
  
Spencer Williams

Duration
  

Country
  
United States

6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Comedy, Drama

Writer
  
True T. Thompson

Language
  
English

Juke Joint (1947 film) movie poster

Release date
  
1947 (USA)

Cast
  
Spencer Williams
(Bad News Johnson / Vanderbilt Whitney),
July Jones
('Cornbread' Green),
Inez Newell
(Louella 'Mama Lou' Holiday),
Leonard Duncan
(Samuel 'Papa Sam' Holiday),
Dauphine Moore
(Barbara 'Honey Dew' Holiday)

Genres
  
Race film, Comedy, Musical, Black-and-white, Musical comedy

Similar movies
  
Related Spencer Williams movies

Tagline
  
The Joint is Jumpin'! / The Jive is Jivvin'! / The Jam is Jammin'! / Everybody's High in the Happy Slap-Happy Holiday Family!

Juke joint 1947


Juke Joint is a 1947 race film directed by and starring Spencer Williams and produced and released by Sack Amusement Enterprises.

Contents

Juke Joint (1947 film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters8274p8274p

Juke joint 1947 spencer williams


Plot

Bad News Johnson, a con artist from Memphis, Tennessee, arrives in Dallas, Texas, accompanied by his dim sidekick July Jones with only twenty-five cents between them. Johnson is constantly exasperated at Jones’ deficient perspicacity, and at one point he comments Jones is so dense that he probably thinks "Veronica Lake is some kind of summer resort." The duo arrange to become boarders at the home of Louella "Mama Lou" Holiday, who is fooled into believing Johnson is an acting teacher named Whitney Vanderbilt; Jones takes the alias of Cornbread Green. Mrs. Holiday agrees to give the men free room and board if they will provide poise lessons to her daughter, an aspiring beauty queen named Honey Dew. The lessons pay off and Honey Dew wins the beauty contest, but problems arise when Mrs. Holiday’s husband, Papa Sam, decides to hold a party for the new beauty queen at a disreputable juke joint.

Production history

Juke Joint was the last in a series of films directed by Spencer Williams, an African American actor and writer, for production by Sack Amusement Enterprises, a white-owned Dallas-based company that distributed all-black race films to segregated theaters across the United States. Williams was among the few African Americans to direct films during the 1940s.

The juke joint scenes were filmed on location at the Rose Room in Dallas and Don’s Keyhole in San Antonio, Texas, and included musical numbers featuring band leader Red Calhoun.

Following the release of Juke Joint, Williams disappeared from the entertainment industry. He returned to prominence in 1951 when he was cast as Andrew H. “Andy” Brown in the television version of the radio comedy Amos 'n Andy, which ran on CBS from 1951 to 1953. He made one final film appearance in a small role in the 1962 Italian horror production L'Orribile Segreto del Dottor Hitchcock.

Juke Joint was considered a lost film for many years, until a print was located in 1983 in a warehouse in Tyler, Texas.

References

Juke Joint (1947 film) Wikipedia
Juke Joint (1947 film) IMDb Juke Joint (1947 film) themoviedb.org