AFI Catalog of Feature Films
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The Band Plays On
Alternate Title: Backfield
Director: Russell Mack (Dir)
Release Date:   21 Dec 1934
Production Date:   9 Oct--mid-Nov 1934
Duration (in mins):   85 or 89
Duration (in reels):   9
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Cast:   Robert Young (Tony [Ferrara])  
    Stuart Erwin ([Clarence] Stuffy [Wilson])  
    Leo Carrillo (Angelo)  
    Betty Furness (Kitty [O'Brien])  
    Ted Healy (Joe [O'Brien])  
    Preston Foster ([Howard] Howdy [Hardy])  
    Russell Hardie (Mike [O'Brien])  
    William Tannen ([Julius] Rosy [Rosenberg])  
    Robert Livingston (Bob [Stone])  
    Norman Phillips Jr. (Stuffy, as a boy)  
    David Durand (Tony, as a boy)  
    Sidney Miller (Rosy, as a boy)  
    Beaudine Anderson (Mike, as a boy)  
    Betty Jane Graham (Kitty, as a girl)  
    Joseph Sauers (Mr. Thomas)  
    Henry Kolker (Professor Hackett)  
    Charles Levinson (Shyster lawyer)  
    John Hyams (Alumni)  
    Arthur Stuart Hull (Graduate)  
    Carl Stockdale (Graduate)  
    Harvey Clark (Graduate)  
    Edward Le Saint (Doctor [)  
    Gayne Whitman (Doctor)  
    Purnell Pratt (Judge)  
    Pinky Parker (Reporter)  
    Bobby Watson (Radio announcer)  
    John Kelly (Truck driver)  
    Arthur Vinton (John F. Hertz)  
    Edward Gargan (Lumberjack)  
    Cyril McLaglen (Lumberjack)  
    Warner Richmond (Lumberjack)  

Summary: After they are caught stealing an automobile, young Tony Ferrara, Clarence "Stuffy" Wilson, Mike O'Brien and Julius "Rosy" Rosenberg are sent by a judge to Howard "Howdy" Hardy, the Pacific University football coach who also instructs and counsels troubled youth. Although at first cocky and independent, the boys are humbled on the football field and learn the importance of team work from the devoted Howdy. Under Howdy's tutelage, the boys become high school stars, earning the nickname "Hardy's Bombers," and then enroll at Pacific. There, the Bombers lead the university's football team to repeated victories while also working hard to earn their college degrees. In spite of a long-lived, gentle romantic rivalry between Tony and Stuffy over Mike's pretty sister Kitty, who hopes to marry Tony after graduation, the Bombers room together and remain the closest of friends. Consequently, when Mike flunks his physics class and is threatened with suspension from the team, his fellow Bombers, as well as Kitty and Angelo, a football-crazy tailor, help him to retake the final exam and pass the course. Kitty also helps the Bombers to resist the financial temptations of her older brother Joe, an unscrupulous promoter who wants the boys to leave college and join professional football. Although aware of Kitty's disapproval, the egotistical Tony dines with Joe one night and is seen by Howdy. After the next football practice, Howdy announces that another player will start in Tony's position, and furious at being benched, Tony decides to sign up with Joe. Just before the start of the game, however, the other Bombers and Angelo learn of Tony's move and rush to stop him from signing Joe's contract. On the way, Stuffy and Angelo are involved in an automobile accident in which Stuffy is seriously injured. Unaware of Stuffy's accident, Howdy reprimands Mike and Rosy for being late for the game, causing them to quit the team in disgust. After Kitty upbraids him for his selfish immaturity, a guilt-ridden Tony encourages Stuffy, who is in traction with a severely fractured leg, to pursue Kitty, while at the same time, discouraging her from resuming their romance. Without the Bombers, Pacific loses its remaining games, and Howdy is pressured by the college to bring his proteges back to the team. Determined to teach the Bombers a lesson in sportsmanship, however, Howdy refuses to ask them back, but lies to Stuffy that all is well. When Stuffy, who has been told that he will never play football again, finally is released from the hospital, he learns about the riff with Howdy and denounces his friends as ungrateful. Shamed when they hear that Howdy paid all of Stuffy's medical bills, Mike, Tony and Rosy decide to return to the team in the fall and get in shape by working in a lumber camp. After a tough but rewarding summer, the three Bombers make Howdy's team but are kept on the bench during the games. Toward the end of a big game, which Pacific is losing by seven points, Tony begs Howdy to put the Bombers in, and convinced that their motives are unselfish, Howdy relents. Although the Bombers are unable to score the tying point, Howdy is satisfied that they have matured and that Tony finally understands the importance of team work. Seeing Kitty's ecstatic reactions to Tony's play, Stuffy then sacrifices his own feelings and encourages Tony to reunite with his childhood sweetheart. 

Production Company: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corp. (Loew's, Inc.)
Distribution Company: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corp.  
Director: Russell Mack (Dir)
  Sandy Roth (Asst dir)
Producer: Ned Marin (Prod)
Writer: Bernard Schubert (Scr)
  Ralph Spence (Scr)
  Harvey Gates (Scr)
  Byron Morgan (Story)
  J. Robert Bren (Story)
  Howard Emmett Rogers (Contr to spec seq)
Photography: Leonard Smith (Photog)
Art Direction: Cedric Gibbons (Art dir)
  Harry Oliver (Art dir assoc)
  Edwin B. Willis (Art dir assoc)
Film Editor: William LeVanway (Film ed)
Music: Oscar Radin (Mus score)
Sound: Douglas Shearer (Rec dir)
Country: United States

Source Text: Based on the short story "The Gravy Game" by Harry A. Stuhldreher and W. Thorton Martin in The Saturday Evening Post (21 Oct 1933).
Authors: W. Thorton Martin
  Harry A. Stuhldreher

Copyright Claimant Copyright Date Copyright Number Passed By NBR:
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corp. 17/12/1934 dd/mm/yyyy LP5224 Yes

PCA NO: 457
Physical Properties: b&w;:
  Sd: Western Electric Sound System

 
Genre: Drama
  Drama
Sub-Genre: College
  Football
 
Subjects (Major): College life
  Football
  Friendship
  Maturation
  Romantic rivalry
  Self-sacrifice
 
Subjects (Minor): Athletic coaches
  Automobile accidents
  Brothers and sisters
  Contracts
  Egotists
  High schools
  Hospitals
  Italians
  Judges
  Juvenile delinquents
  Lumber camps
  Promoters
  Tailors
  Thieves

Note: The title of Byron Morgan and J. Robert Bren's original screen story was "Backfield," which also was a working title of the film. Another working title was Kid from College . Reviewers noted the resemblance between the film's "Hardy's Bombers" and the "Four Horsemen," real-life football players from Notre Dame. Hector Sarno was listed in HR production charts as a cast member, but his participation in the final film has not been confirmed. 

Bibliographic Sources:   Date   Page
Daily Variety   30 Oct 34   p. 1.
Daily Variety   17 Dec 34   p. 3.
Film Daily   22 Dec 34   p. 3.
HF   13 Oct 34   p. 8.
Hollywood Reporter   10 Oct 34   p. 7.
Hollywood Reporter   22 Oct 34   p. 6.
Hollywood Reporter   12 Nov 34   p. 6.
Hollywood Reporter   17 Dec 34   p. 3.
Motion Picture Herald   3 Nov 34   p. 44.
Motion Picture Herald   29 Dec 34   p. 54, 59
New York Times   22 Dec 34   p. 21.
Variety   25 Dec 34   p. 12.

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The American Film Institute is grateful to Sir Paul Getty KBE and the Sir Paul Getty KBE Estate for their dedication to the art of the moving image and their support for the AFI Catalog of Feature Films and without whose support AFI would not have been able to achieve this historical landmark in this epic scholarly endeavor.
 
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