Western Jamboree
Western Jamboree is a 1938 American Western musical film directed by Ralph Staub and starring Gene Autry, Smiley Burnette, and Jean Rouverol. Based on a story by Patricia Harper, the film is about a singing cowboy who goes up against a gang of outlaws who are looking to steal the valuable helium gas beneath the cowboy's ranch.
Plot
Ranch foreman Gene Autry, his sidekick Frog Milhouse, and the rest of the men at the Circle J ranch are anxious about the new owner, Van Fleet, who recently purchased the property. While awaiting his arrival, they learn that outlaws are searching for a helium gas floe on the property—gas they can sell to foreign powers for use in dirigibles, which are banned by the United States government. After one of the ranch hands is attacked, Gene and Frog go after the outlaws. At an abandoned house near the trail they find old Dad Haskell, who tells Gene that his daughter Betty believes that he is the owner of the Circle J and is due to arrive from the east. Gene agrees to help maintain his charade and turns the Circle J into a dude ranch until the real owner arrives.When Betty arrives with her fiancé, Walter Gregory, and his mother, Gene pretends to save her from Frog who poses as an Indian. She gets angry at Gene when she finds out it is just a gag. That night, Betty tells her father that Mrs. Gregory allowed her to charge $1,500 worth of clothing to her account, and she needs to pay the money back soon.
The next day, while continuing to track the outlaws, Gene decides to follow Betty when she goes for a ride and they accidentally discover the source of the helium. The outlaws, who have been following Gene, also now know the location of the gas floe. One of the gang tries to purchase the ranch from Dad, thinking that he is the owner, he refuses, making Walter and his mother suspicious. Mrs. Gregory then decides to get the $1,500 directly from Dad, who writes her a bad check to settle the debt, thinking he can win the money back from her at cards.
Meanwhile, Gene grows suspicious of Randolph Kimball, the chemist who once told the previous owner of the Circle J that the gas on the property was worthless. When Van Fleet finally arrives at his ranch, he is taken and tied up by Frog and ranch hand Joseph Frisco who want to keep him out of the way. Not knowing about their intentions, Gene comes across the incensed owner and frees him. After Doc Trimble wins enough money at cards to cover Dad's check, Van Fleet shows up and angrily throws everyone off of his ranch, including Walter and his mother, who want nothing more to do with Betty and Dad.
While watching Frog blowing up balloons, Gene gets an idea and decides to fill an aeronautical balloon with helium and send Frog up in a basket. From the sky, Frog discovers the pipeline to the outlaws' cave, and after Gene uses a bullet to puncture Frog's balloon, they head towards the hideout. Following a shootout with the gang, Gene captures most of the outlaws and apprehends Kimball as he attempts to escape in a truck. Impressed with Gene's initiative, Van Fleet offers him the position of ranch manager, and Betty decides that Gene would make a much better husband than her former fiancé.
Cast
- Gene Autry as Gene Autry
- Smiley Burnette as Frog Millhouse
- Jean Rouverol as Betty Haskell
- Esther Muir as Duchess
- Joe Frisco as Frisco
- Frank Darien as Dad Haskell
- Margaret Armstrong as Mrs. Gregory
- Harry Holman as Doc Trimble
- Edward Raquello as Don Carlos
- Ben Hewlett as Randolph Kimball
- Kermit Maynard as Ranch Hand Slim
- George Walcott as Walter Gregory
- Ray Teal as McCall
- Champion as Gene's Horse
Production
Filming and budget
Western Jamboree was filmed October 18–27, 1938. The film had an operating budget of $55,462.Stuntwork
- Ken Cooper
- Duke Green
- Kermit Maynard
- Bill Yrigoyen
Soundtrack
- "The Cowboy's Dream " by Gene Autry and Cowboys in the opening scene
- "The Darktown Strutters' Ball" by Joe Frisco and Edward Raquello in the saloon
- "Cielito Lindo" by Gene Autry in Spanish, and Cowboys in the saloon
- "Balloon Song" by Smiley Burnette
- "My Bonnie "
- "Old Folks at Home "
- "Old November Moon" by Gene Autry with backup by Cowboys
- "I Love the Morning" by Gene Autry, Smiley Burnette, Frankie Marvin and other Cowboys
- "When the Bloom Is on the Sage " by Gene Autry and saloon patrons, with Joe Frisco and Edward Raquello
- "Paradise in the Moonlight"