Zis Boom Bah

Zis Boom Bah
Grace Hayes, Peter Lind Hayes, and Mary Healy in Zis Boom Bah (1941)
Directed by William Nigh
Produced by Sam Katzman (producer)
Peter A. Mayer (associate producer)
Written by Connie Lee (original story) &
Harvey Gates (original story)
Harvey Gates (screenplay) &
Jack Henley (screenplay)
Starring Grace Hayes
Peter Lind Hayes
Mary Healy
Cinematography Marcel Le Picard
Edited by Robert Golden
Production
company
Release dates
1941
Running time
61 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Zis Boom Bah is a 1941 American film directed by William Nigh. The film is also known as College Sweethearts.

Plot

Grace Hayes, as herself essentially, Grace Hayes, has been content to play the vaudeville circuit, and support her son, and the wealthy family who shunned her.

Tired of the road, she goes to visit her son, played by her real-life son Peter Lind Hayes, as Peter Kendricks, with her personal assistant, played by her real-life daughter-in-law, Mary Healy, as Mary Healy, in cognito.[1]

Once there, she finds her son and the college “going to Hell in a hand basket” despite the earnest efforts of the kind hearted Dean, Richard "Skeets" Gallagher, as Professor Warren. The college and the old families are running out of money and spirit.

Grace buys the local diner, turns it into a version of her real-life club, encouraging the kids to give it the old college try, and put on a show to raise the funds and spirit the college needs to survive. It doesn’t take long, with a little elbow grease, for the kids’ heart to shine through.

The question remains whether the college will survive, or if the Dean, Peter and the kids will be joining Grace and Mary on the road.

Cast

uncredited

Soundtrack

Production

Grace Hayes was famous as a performer, and for the "movie stars' hang-out" Grace Hayes Lodge and the chic Las Vegas nightclub, The Red Rooster.[2]

Peter Lind Hayes and Mary Healy were married from 1940 to Hayes' death in 1998, and regularly worked together, notably on the film The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T (1953).

Benny Rubin, who tap dances his way through the film, as young college kid Nick, was 42, when the film was made.[3]

References

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