Young and Willing
Young and Willing is a 1943 American comedy film produced and directed by Edward H. Griffith and starring William Holden, Eddie Bracken, Robert Benchley, and Susan Hayward. With a screenplay by Virginia Van Upp based on the play Out of the Frying Pan by Francis Swann, the film is about young, aspiring actors—three men and three women—who combine their resources and move into the same apartment, hoping to keep the landlady in the dark until they can become famous. Young and Willing was made by Paramount Pictures and distributed by United Artists.
Plot
Struggling young actors share an apartment to make ends meet. This scenario is pretty daring considering the conservative and censorious attitudes of that period. The landlady provides a play to the actors that turns out to have been left behind long ago by a destitute, evicted tenant. That former tenant is now a successful theater producer and playwright who has recently taken a room in his old haunts to recharge his creativity and try to rewrite his first play—one that the landlady had kept when he was evicted. The young actors attempt to sell his own play to him. Complications begin when Cousin Muriel visits and discovers the sinful cohabitation; she tattles to her folks, who charge over to investigate and drag the daughters home. Silliness and mayhem ensue, propelled by Muriel's actions and highlighted by her unique little-girl, tattletale voice.Cast
- William Holden as Norman Reese
- Eddie Bracken as George Bodell
- Robert Benchley as Arthur Kenny
- Susan Hayward as Kate Benson
- Martha O'Driscoll as Dottie Coburn
- Barbara Britton as Marge Benson Dennison
- Mabel Paige as Mrs. Garnet
- Florence MacMichael as Muriel Foster
- James Brown as Tony Dennison
- Jay Fassett as J.T. Coburn
- Paul Hurst as First Cop
- Olin Howland as Second Cop
- Billy Bevan as Phillips