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High Time (film)

High Time is a 1960 American comedy film directed by Blake Edwards and starring Bing Crosby, Fabian, Tuesday Weld, and Nicole Maurey. The film is told from the perspective of a middle-aged man who enters the world of a new generation of postwar youth.

High Time
Theatrical release poster
Directed byBlake Edwards
Screenplay by
Story byGarson Kanin
Produced byCharles Brackett
Starring
CinematographyEllsworth Fredericks
Edited byRobert L. Simpson
Music byHenry Mancini
Production
company
Bing Crosby Productions
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release date
  • September 16, 1960 (1960-09-16) (USA)
Running time
103 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$2,815,000[1]
Box office$2.5 million (US/ Canada)[2][3]

In the years since its release, High Time has come to be viewed as a comedic study of the slowly emerging generation gap between the music and mores of an older generation and postwar youth, as well as an inadvertent time capsule of American adolescents and lifestyles in 1960.[4]

Plot edit

Wealthy restaurateur Harvey Howard (Bing Crosby), a self-made man, widower, and owner of Harvey Howard Smokehouses, decides to go back to college at the age of 51 and earn a bachelor's degree. He faces opposition from his snobbish grown children, as well as a generation gap between himself and his much-younger fellow students. The first day in school, he finds that just convincing older students, faculty, and administrators that he is serious is a humorous task. He enrolls and receives freshman rooming, and is up front about his determination to be "just another freshman". He's assigned a quad rooming arrangement, which sets precedent for the upcoming years - dealing with the student press, the dorm adviser, and making that first toast with sauerkraut juice to seal their bond to complete their four years together.

The president's welcoming speech sets the tone for the effort facing the freshman class. Harvey has to convince the phys ed coach that he has what it takes to compete by doing ten plus one pull-ups to the cheers of his fellow younger frosh, only to collapse on his face upon finishing his set. Another frosh challenge is the bonfire that must exceed the height of the prior years. Harvey meets the French professor, Helen Gauthier, when removing a supporting wooden box from under her porch. The bonfire's total height comes up a foot short; Harvey climbs to the summit and deposits his three-foot chair. Having two brilliant roommates and jock Gil Sparrow (Fabian), the academic rigors are always fuel for comedy and camaraderie. Science Professor Thayer is haphazard, and numerous comedic moments ensue including chemicals that take on a life of their own, pairs of wires that should never be brought near each other during a storm, and improving one's skating skills except on thin ice.

Sophomore year again has Harvey being berated by his children, but the school's beat reporter is there to welcome him and puts up with the snobby kids. Harvey is off to meet his last year's roommates and the requisite toast to success. He is asked to join their fraternity and has the usual hazing period to endure, polishing shoes, washing floors, and the most challenging, dressing in drag and getting a retired colonel to sign his dance card at a costume ball. The elderly southern gentleman is suffering a gout attack and his social climbing children are attending the same event. While dancing with his son, Harvey so discombobulates him that his dress is torn in half, and while having it fixed in the ladies lounge, he floors his daughter. Back on the floor, Harvey bribes the band leader to play "Dixie", the colonel stands, Harvey pounces into his arms, dancing the length of the floor, deposits the sputtering colonel on his easy chair, has him autograph his dance card, throws his wig into his lap, and rushes the exit. The rest of the year is full of great football by Gil, academic pressure, and more antics by Prof. Thayer.

Junior year starts with Harvey arriving in a red Mercedes convertible, and meeting the group at a Harvey Howard Smokehouse for a toast of goat milk, which only T.J. Padmanagham likes. The Smokehouse maitre D' at Harvey Howard's, super-snob Burdick, doesn't like one bit of this. His first task is to rudely challenge the group to order their meals, which is fine with Harvey, who orders Harvey Burgers with special sauce for the lot. Burdick sneers back that it's too early for the special sauce. Navy brat Bob Bannerman chimes in with "... it's later than you think". The burgers arrive and are dry, carbonized, and inedible. Harvey, who stands behind all burgers served in his Smokehouses, calls Burdick over to "take them back". Burdick challenges Harvey to do better, which he does. Burdick, watching Harvey jump to it at the grill, catches Harvey Howard's full name and faints. Burdick completes eating a burger prepared by Harvey and becomes a transformed Harvey employee. Over the summer, prior to junior year, Harvey had hired Professor Gauthier to tutor him at Nag's Head. His children, in turn, complain to the college and it appears that Gauthier has to resign to save face. The students protest and the president delays any action until the next spring.

For senior year, Harvey arrives in a taxi. The group gathers and toast their final year. Both Harvey and Gil are still hitting the books hard, with some success. The year features hay rides, phone booth body jams, and a smooth procession towards graduation. Harvey is in denial about his love of Professor Gauthier, and she coyly asks him if he would like to marry her. He stammers, but the gauntlet is thrown. Harvey is the Class of 1960 valedictorian and his speech covers all the bases: why he challenged himself to find a greater purpose and put up with the struggle, and his growing admiration and acceptance of the accomplishments of his adult children and his friends. He concludes with a final challenge to the graduate: never quit, never say something like "I could no sooner do that, than I could fly." At this moment, Harvey is hoisted above the audience on cables to fly around the auditorium. A wink to Professor Gauthier, a smile to all, the end.

Cast edit

Production edit

Development edit

High Time was scripted by Garson Kanin, Frank Waldman and Tom Waldman. It was originally titled "Big Daddy", with the starring role to be played by Gary Cooper. When Cooper's terminal illness forced him to turn down the role, Bing Crosby was signed as lead, and the script was revised to his requirements.

The movie was known as Daddy-O before being changed to High Time.[6]

Simone Signoret was once announced for the female lead.[7] It was Fabian's second film.[8]

Shooting edit

Filming started 2 February 1960.[9] The movie was shot in Los Angeles at UCLA and in Stockton, California at Stockton Junior High School, Amos Alonzo Stagg Senior High School, the University of the Pacific, and other locations.[10]

It was originally intended to be filmed at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, but shortly before shooting was to begin, the school was informed that filming had been moved to California.[citation needed] As a concession to disappointed students, faculty and alumni, many of the landmarks of Wake Forest University (such as "Bostwick Dormitory", then a women's residence hall) are mentioned in the script.

Filming was interrupted by the strike of the Screen Actors Guild on 7 March.[11] Fabian's manager was reported as wanting to buy the film so it could be completed. "Now I've heard everything," wrote Hedda Hopper. "Fabian, who admits he can't sing and is perfectly honest about it, has been in our business a little more than a year."[12] The strike ended and filming resumed on 12 April.[13]

Fabian later called Bing Crosby "a great artist, a great actor, and a great musical person" but "not a nice man.”[14]

Richard Beymer began a romantic relationship with Tuesday Weld during filming.[15]

Music edit

The film introduced the song "The Second Time Around". It was the last song Bing Crosby introduced that was nominated for an Oscar for Best Song. The song became a hit single for Frank Sinatra, and it later was recorded by a number of artists, including Barbra Streisand for "The Movie Album" (2003).

The title song "High Time" was adopted in 1961 as the opening theme music for Mr. Peppermint, a long-running children's show in the Dallas–Fort Worth area.[16]

Soundtrack edit

Score edit

The score of High Time was released in 1960 on vinyl by RCA Victor as a 12-track album Music from the Motion Picture Score "High Time". All tracks are by Henri Mancini and performed by Henry Mancini and His Orchestra.

  1. High Time
  2. Moon Talk
  3. So Neat
  4. The Old College Try Cha-Cha
  5. The Nutty Professor
  6. Frish Frosh
  7. The Second Time Around
  8. A Mild Blast
  9. Harv's Blues
  10. New Blood
  11. The Dean Speaks
  12. Tiger!

Personnel

Reception edit

The film was released on September 16, 1960 and had a mixed reception. Variety wrote "High Time is pretty lightweight fare for a star of Bing Crosby’s proportions, and all the draw of the Groaner, who only trills twice, will be required to sell it...Crosby handles his role in his usual fashion, perfectly timing his laughs, and delivers a pair of Sammy Cahn-James Van Heusen songs, “The Second Time Around” and “Nobody’s Perfect.” (sic).[20]

Bosley Crowther of The New York Times was clearly disappointed by it, writing "Thus Mr. Crosby, still pretending to be youthful, goes to college again, but a few necessaries are lacking. One of them is a script. The other is youth. The screen play by Tom and Frank Waldman, based on a story by Garson Kanin, is awfully sad, awfully burdened with hackneyed situations. And Mr. Crosby, alas, is no kid. He tries hard to be casual and boyish, to prove modestly that he’s in the groove, to match the animal spirits of the swarming youngsters, such as Fabian and Miss Weld. But as much as director Blake Edwards has tried to help him with a lively beat that keeps the action thumping and gives an illusion of vitality, at least, there is a terrible gauntness and look of exhaustion about Mr. Crosby when the camera gets close and peers at his face. We don’t blame his children (in the film) for objecting to his going to college. He should have stayed at home with his feet to the fire."[21]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Solomon, Aubrey. Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History. Scarecrow Press, 1989, p. 253.
  2. ^ "Rental Potentials of 1960", Variety, 4 January 1961 p 47. Please note figures are rentals as opposed to total gross.
  3. ^ Solomon, Aubrey. Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History. Scarecrow Press, 1989, p. 229.
  4. ^ "High Time". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved July 25, 2012.
  5. ^ "Full cast and crew for High Time". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved July 25, 2012.
  6. ^ "Martin Wants Son, Craig, for Film". Los Angeles Times. 22 December 1959. p. A9. ProQuest 167602167.
  7. ^ Hopper, Hedda (23 December 1959). "Looking at Hollywood: Signoret Is Set for Bing's 'High Time'". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. a6. ProQuest 182420132.
  8. ^ Vagg, Stephen (26 August 2019). "The Cinema of Fabian". Diabolique.
  9. ^ "FILMLAND EVENTS: Preminger Puts Lawford in 'Exodus'". Los Angeles Times. 2 February 1960. p. 22. ProQuest 167589533.
  10. ^ McDonald, Thomas (24 April 1960). "'OLD GRAD' CROSBY CUTS A NEW CAMPUS CAPER". The New York Times. ProQuest 114997837.
  11. ^ "ACTORS START STRIKE AT 7 MAJOR STUDIOS: Guild Turns Down Proposal to Finish Work on 8 Movies ACTORS REJECT MORATORIUM PLEA". Los Angeles Times. 7 March 1960. ProQuest 167570463.
  12. ^ Hopper, Hedda (10 Mar 1960). "Fabian Attempting to Buy Bing's Film: Wants to Finish Strike-Bound Movie; Oscars Not Affected". Los Angeles Times. p. B8. ProQuest 167690793.
  13. ^ Schumach, Murray (11 April 1960). "WORK TO RESUME AT STUDIOS TODAY; Top Firms to Begin Slowly on Films Halted by Strike, Pending Pact Ratification". The New York Times.
  14. ^ Jack Neary, "Interview with Fabian" 2014-02-01 at the Wayback Machine accessed 18 January 2014
  15. ^ "The DICK BEYMER STORY: He Thanks Bing Crosby for His First Big Break, but He Won a Starring Role in 'West Side Story' Thru His Own Talent". Chicago Daily Tribune. 21 August 1960. p. b26. ProQuest 182600443.
  16. ^ Patoski, Joe Nick (1 July 1996). "The Candy Man". Texas Monthly.
  17. ^ Reynolds, Fred (1986). Road to Hollywood. Gateshead, UK: John Joyce. p. 256.
  18. ^ a b High Time by Henry Mancini - RYM/Sonemic, retrieved 2023-01-27
  19. ^ Knechtel, J. Beaumont. Horn Outside the Concert Hall: Nontraditional Implementation of the Horn (Thesis). ProQuest 2056858107.
  20. ^ Variety, September 21, 1960[full citation needed][title missing][page needed]
  21. ^ Crowther, Bosley (17 September 1960). "Screen: Campus Hoopla: Crosby Plays Student Again in 'High Time'". The New York Times. ProQuest 115165195.

External links edit

high, time, film, high, time, 1960, american, comedy, film, directed, blake, edwards, starring, bing, crosby, fabian, tuesday, weld, nicole, maurey, film, told, from, perspective, middle, aged, enters, world, generation, postwar, youth, high, timetheatrical, r. High Time is a 1960 American comedy film directed by Blake Edwards and starring Bing Crosby Fabian Tuesday Weld and Nicole Maurey The film is told from the perspective of a middle aged man who enters the world of a new generation of postwar youth High TimeTheatrical release posterDirected byBlake EdwardsScreenplay byFrank Waldman Tom WaldmanStory byGarson KaninProduced byCharles BrackettStarringBing Crosby Fabian Tuesday Weld Nicole MaureyCinematographyEllsworth FredericksEdited byRobert L SimpsonMusic byHenry ManciniProductioncompanyBing Crosby ProductionsDistributed by20th Century FoxRelease dateSeptember 16 1960 1960 09 16 USA Running time103 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 2 815 000 1 Box office 2 5 million US Canada 2 3 In the years since its release High Time has come to be viewed as a comedic study of the slowly emerging generation gap between the music and mores of an older generation and postwar youth as well as an inadvertent time capsule of American adolescents and lifestyles in 1960 4 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Development 3 2 Shooting 4 Music 4 1 Soundtrack 4 2 Score 5 Reception 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPlot editWealthy restaurateur Harvey Howard Bing Crosby a self made man widower and owner of Harvey Howard Smokehouses decides to go back to college at the age of 51 and earn a bachelor s degree He faces opposition from his snobbish grown children as well as a generation gap between himself and his much younger fellow students The first day in school he finds that just convincing older students faculty and administrators that he is serious is a humorous task He enrolls and receives freshman rooming and is up front about his determination to be just another freshman He s assigned a quad rooming arrangement which sets precedent for the upcoming years dealing with the student press the dorm adviser and making that first toast with sauerkraut juice to seal their bond to complete their four years together The president s welcoming speech sets the tone for the effort facing the freshman class Harvey has to convince the phys ed coach that he has what it takes to compete by doing ten plus one pull ups to the cheers of his fellow younger frosh only to collapse on his face upon finishing his set Another frosh challenge is the bonfire that must exceed the height of the prior years Harvey meets the French professor Helen Gauthier when removing a supporting wooden box from under her porch The bonfire s total height comes up a foot short Harvey climbs to the summit and deposits his three foot chair Having two brilliant roommates and jock Gil Sparrow Fabian the academic rigors are always fuel for comedy and camaraderie Science Professor Thayer is haphazard and numerous comedic moments ensue including chemicals that take on a life of their own pairs of wires that should never be brought near each other during a storm and improving one s skating skills except on thin ice Sophomore year again has Harvey being berated by his children but the school s beat reporter is there to welcome him and puts up with the snobby kids Harvey is off to meet his last year s roommates and the requisite toast to success He is asked to join their fraternity and has the usual hazing period to endure polishing shoes washing floors and the most challenging dressing in drag and getting a retired colonel to sign his dance card at a costume ball The elderly southern gentleman is suffering a gout attack and his social climbing children are attending the same event While dancing with his son Harvey so discombobulates him that his dress is torn in half and while having it fixed in the ladies lounge he floors his daughter Back on the floor Harvey bribes the band leader to play Dixie the colonel stands Harvey pounces into his arms dancing the length of the floor deposits the sputtering colonel on his easy chair has him autograph his dance card throws his wig into his lap and rushes the exit The rest of the year is full of great football by Gil academic pressure and more antics by Prof Thayer Junior year starts with Harvey arriving in a red Mercedes convertible and meeting the group at a Harvey Howard Smokehouse for a toast of goat milk which only T J Padmanagham likes The Smokehouse maitre D at Harvey Howard s super snob Burdick doesn t like one bit of this His first task is to rudely challenge the group to order their meals which is fine with Harvey who orders Harvey Burgers with special sauce for the lot Burdick sneers back that it s too early for the special sauce Navy brat Bob Bannerman chimes in with it s later than you think The burgers arrive and are dry carbonized and inedible Harvey who stands behind all burgers served in his Smokehouses calls Burdick over to take them back Burdick challenges Harvey to do better which he does Burdick watching Harvey jump to it at the grill catches Harvey Howard s full name and faints Burdick completes eating a burger prepared by Harvey and becomes a transformed Harvey employee Over the summer prior to junior year Harvey had hired Professor Gauthier to tutor him at Nag s Head His children in turn complain to the college and it appears that Gauthier has to resign to save face The students protest and the president delays any action until the next spring For senior year Harvey arrives in a taxi The group gathers and toast their final year Both Harvey and Gil are still hitting the books hard with some success The year features hay rides phone booth body jams and a smooth procession towards graduation Harvey is in denial about his love of Professor Gauthier and she coyly asks him if he would like to marry her He stammers but the gauntlet is thrown Harvey is the Class of 1960 valedictorian and his speech covers all the bases why he challenged himself to find a greater purpose and put up with the struggle and his growing admiration and acceptance of the accomplishments of his adult children and his friends He concludes with a final challenge to the graduate never quit never say something like I could no sooner do that than I could fly At this moment Harvey is hoisted above the audience on cables to fly around the auditorium A wink to Professor Gauthier a smile to all the end Cast editBing Crosby as Harvey Howard Fabian Forte as Gil Sparrow Tuesday Weld as Joy Elder Nicole Maurey as Prof Helene Gauthier Richard Beymer as Bob Bannerman Patrick Adiarte as T J Padmanagham Yvonne Craig as Randy Scoop Pruitt Jimmy Boyd as Robert Higgson Gavin MacLeod as Professor Thayer Kenneth MacKenna as President Byrne of Pinehurst Nina Shipman as Laura Howard Angus Duncan as Harvey Howard Jr Paul von Schreiber as Crump Harold Ayer as Student Jimmy Baya as Band Leader Carla Borelli as Harvey Jr s Date at Ball Harry Carter as Harvey s Chauffeur Alvin Childress as Guest Announcer at Judge Carter s Ball Donald Cockburn as Basketball Coach Dick Crockett as Bones McKinney Douglass Dumbrille as Judge Carter Gregg Dunn in bit role Opal Euard as Mrs Carter Frank Fowler as Professor Don Gazzaniga in bit role Ruby Goodwin as Dr Byrne s Maid Ray Hamilton as Laura s Date at Ball John Page Harrington as Heazlett Linda Hutchings in bit role Byron Kane as Professor Jean Paul King as Professor James Lanphier as Burdick Maitre D at Harvey Howard s Johnny Lee as Servant at Judge Carter s Ball Mary Patton as Matron Edmund T Peckham as Professor Ray A Rustigan as Hedgepeth Art Salter as Gas Station Attendant Jeffrey Sayre as Helps Harvey from Floor at Dance Frank J Scannell as Auctioneer at College Elisabeth Talbot Martin as Matron Emerson Treacy as Professor Janice Trotter as Student Irene Vernon as Matron Ernestine Wade as Judge Carter s Maid H E West in bit role 5 Production editDevelopment edit High Time was scripted by Garson Kanin Frank Waldman and Tom Waldman It was originally titled Big Daddy with the starring role to be played by Gary Cooper When Cooper s terminal illness forced him to turn down the role Bing Crosby was signed as lead and the script was revised to his requirements The movie was known as Daddy O before being changed to High Time 6 Simone Signoret was once announced for the female lead 7 It was Fabian s second film 8 Shooting edit Filming started 2 February 1960 9 The movie was shot in Los Angeles at UCLA and in Stockton California at Stockton Junior High School Amos Alonzo Stagg Senior High School the University of the Pacific and other locations 10 It was originally intended to be filmed at Wake Forest University in Winston Salem North Carolina but shortly before shooting was to begin the school was informed that filming had been moved to California citation needed As a concession to disappointed students faculty and alumni many of the landmarks of Wake Forest University such as Bostwick Dormitory then a women s residence hall are mentioned in the script Filming was interrupted by the strike of the Screen Actors Guild on 7 March 11 Fabian s manager was reported as wanting to buy the film so it could be completed Now I ve heard everything wrote Hedda Hopper Fabian who admits he can t sing and is perfectly honest about it has been in our business a little more than a year 12 The strike ended and filming resumed on 12 April 13 Fabian later called Bing Crosby a great artist a great actor and a great musical person but not a nice man 14 Richard Beymer began a romantic relationship with Tuesday Weld during filming 15 Music editThe film introduced the song The Second Time Around It was the last song Bing Crosby introduced that was nominated for an Oscar for Best Song The song became a hit single for Frank Sinatra and it later was recorded by a number of artists including Barbra Streisand for The Movie Album 2003 The title song High Time was adopted in 1961 as the opening theme music for Mr Peppermint a long running children s show in the Dallas Fort Worth area 16 Soundtrack edit High Time Henry Mancini music only The Second Time Around sung by Bing Crosby You Tell Me Your Dream Charles N Daniels Gus Kahn sung by Bing Crosby and Nicole Maurey and chorus It Came Upon the Midnight Clear sung by Bing Crosby Fabian Nicole Maurey and others Nobody s Perfect Jimmy Van Heusen Sammy Cahn a duet between Crosby and Fabian was omitted from the released print of film 17 Score edit The score of High Time was released in 1960 on vinyl by RCA Victor as a 12 track album Music from the Motion Picture Score High Time All tracks are by Henri Mancini and performed by Henry Mancini and His Orchestra High Time Moon Talk So Neat The Old College Try Cha Cha The Nutty Professor Frish Frosh The Second Time Around A Mild Blast Harv s Blues New Blood The Dean Speaks Tiger Personnel Henry Mancini conductor 18 Dick Peirce producer 18 Vincent DeRosa French horn 2 19 Reception editThe film was released on September 16 1960 and had a mixed reception Variety wrote High Time is pretty lightweight fare for a star of Bing Crosby s proportions and all the draw of the Groaner who only trills twice will be required to sell it Crosby handles his role in his usual fashion perfectly timing his laughs and delivers a pair of Sammy Cahn James Van Heusen songs The Second Time Around and Nobody s Perfect sic 20 Bosley Crowther of The New York Times was clearly disappointed by it writing Thus Mr Crosby still pretending to be youthful goes to college again but a few necessaries are lacking One of them is a script The other is youth The screen play by Tom and Frank Waldman based on a story by Garson Kanin is awfully sad awfully burdened with hackneyed situations And Mr Crosby alas is no kid He tries hard to be casual and boyish to prove modestly that he s in the groove to match the animal spirits of the swarming youngsters such as Fabian and Miss Weld But as much as director Blake Edwards has tried to help him with a lively beat that keeps the action thumping and gives an illusion of vitality at least there is a terrible gauntness and look of exhaustion about Mr Crosby when the camera gets close and peers at his face We don t blame his children in the film for objecting to his going to college He should have stayed at home with his feet to the fire 21 See also editList of American films of 1960References edit Solomon Aubrey Twentieth Century Fox A Corporate and Financial History Scarecrow Press 1989 p 253 Rental Potentials of 1960 Variety 4 January 1961 p 47 Please note figures are rentals as opposed to total gross Solomon Aubrey Twentieth Century Fox A Corporate and Financial History Scarecrow Press 1989 p 229 High Time Internet Movie Database Retrieved July 25 2012 Full cast and crew for High Time Internet Movie Database Retrieved July 25 2012 Martin Wants Son Craig for Film Los Angeles Times 22 December 1959 p A9 ProQuest 167602167 Hopper Hedda 23 December 1959 Looking at Hollywood Signoret Is Set for Bing s High Time Chicago Daily Tribune p a6 ProQuest 182420132 Vagg Stephen 26 August 2019 The Cinema of Fabian Diabolique FILMLAND EVENTS Preminger Puts Lawford in Exodus Los Angeles Times 2 February 1960 p 22 ProQuest 167589533 McDonald Thomas 24 April 1960 OLD GRAD CROSBY CUTS A NEW CAMPUS CAPER The New York Times ProQuest 114997837 ACTORS START STRIKE AT 7 MAJOR STUDIOS Guild Turns Down Proposal to Finish Work on 8 Movies ACTORS REJECT MORATORIUM PLEA Los Angeles Times 7 March 1960 ProQuest 167570463 Hopper Hedda 10 Mar 1960 Fabian Attempting to Buy Bing s Film Wants to Finish Strike Bound Movie Oscars Not Affected Los Angeles Times p B8 ProQuest 167690793 Schumach Murray 11 April 1960 WORK TO RESUME AT STUDIOS TODAY Top Firms to Begin Slowly on Films Halted by Strike Pending Pact Ratification The New York Times Jack Neary Interview with Fabian Archived 2014 02 01 at the Wayback Machine accessed 18 January 2014 The DICK BEYMER STORY He Thanks Bing Crosby for His First Big Break but He Won a Starring Role in West Side Story Thru His Own Talent Chicago Daily Tribune 21 August 1960 p b26 ProQuest 182600443 Patoski Joe Nick 1 July 1996 The Candy Man Texas Monthly Reynolds Fred 1986 Road to Hollywood Gateshead UK John Joyce p 256 a b High Time by Henry Mancini RYM Sonemic retrieved 2023 01 27 Knechtel J Beaumont Horn Outside the Concert Hall Nontraditional Implementation of the Horn Thesis ProQuest 2056858107 Variety September 21 1960 full citation needed title missing page needed Crowther Bosley 17 September 1960 Screen Campus Hoopla Crosby Plays Student Again in High Time The New York Times ProQuest 115165195 External links editHigh Time at IMDb High Time at the TCM Movie Database High Time at AllMovie Review at Variety Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title High Time film amp oldid 1165863805, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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