Ship Ahoy

Ship Ahoy
Theatrical poster
Directed by Edward Buzzell
Screenplay by Harry Clork
Irving Brecher (uncredited)
Harry Kurnitz (uncredited)
Story by Matt Brooks
Bradford Ropes
Bert Kalmar
Produced by Jack Cummings
Starring Eleanor Powell
Red Skelton
Bert Lahr
Virginia O'Brien
Cinematography Robert H. Planck
Leonard Smith
Clyde De Vinna
Edited by Blanche Sewell
Music by George Bassman
George Stoll
Production
company
Distributed by Loew's Inc.
Release date
  • May 1942
Running time
95 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $1,037,000
Box office $2,507,000

Ship Ahoy is a 1942 American musical-comedy film directed by Edward Buzzell and starring Eleanor Powell and Red Skelton. It was produced by MGM.

Background

Ship Ahoy was the first of two films in which Powell and Skelton co-starred. It is considered a lesser effort for both actors.

The film is chiefly remembered today for an uncredited performance by Frank Sinatra as a singer with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra.

The movie includes a number in which Powell's character, communicates with US agent in the audience by tapping out a message in morse code.

The film was to be called I'll Take Manila but was renamed after the Japanese captured the Philippines. The setting was changed to Puerto Rico and the song “I'll Take Manila" became "I'll Take Tallulah".

Skelton and Powell next paired up in 1943's I Dood It. In that film, they appeared with Jimmy Dorsey, Tommy's brother.

Plot

Tallulah Winters is a dancing star who is hired to perform on an ocean liner. Before she leaves, she is recruited by what she believes is a branch of the American government and asked to smuggle a prototype explosive mine out of the country. In fact, she is unknowingly working for Nazi agents who have stolen the mine. Meanwhile, Merton Kibble, a writer of pulp fiction adventure stories suffering from severe writer's block, is on the same ship, and soon he finds himself embroiled in Tallulah's real-life adventure.

The brief finale takes place in front of a Navy recruiting station. surrounded by a chorus of sailors. The guys and their girls—and Dorsey's orchestra —are all in uniform, singing “Last Call for Love.”

Cast

Reception

In his June 26, 1942 review in The New York Times, Bosley Crowther lightly praised the “moderate and tuneful little cruise…Metro has stretched the whole thing out about half again as long as it should be, with the consequence that it sags and labors rather heavily in spots. But it skips along right merrily when Miss Powell is doing her turns, especially in a lively rhythm number to a tune called "I'll Take Tallulah." “

According to MGM records the film earned $1,831,000 at the US and Canadian box office and $676,000 elsewhere, making the studio a profit of $1,470,000.