Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
Jump to content

Hold That Baby!

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hold That Baby!
Directed byReginald LeBorg
Written byGerald Schnitzer
Charles Marion
Produced byJan Grippo
StarringLeo Gorcey
Huntz Hall
Gabriel Dell
David Gorcey
William Benedict
CinematographyWilliam A. Sickner
Edited byWilliam Austin
Music byEdward J. Kay
Distributed byMonogram Pictures
Release date
  • June 26, 1949 (1949-06-26)
Running time
64 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Hold That Baby! is a 1949 American comedy film directed by Reginald LeBorg and starring The Bowery Boys.[1] The film was released on June 26, 1949, by Monogram Pictures and is the fourteenth film in the series.

Plot

[edit]

The boys are running a laundromat in the back room of Louie's Sweet Shop. A woman, Laura Andrews, comes in and leaves her baby in one of the laundry baskets and the boys find him. They discover that he is the heir to a fortune, and that his mother hid him so that her aunts couldn't steal the inheritance. After discovering the baby is missing, the aunts have Laura committed to a sanatorium for supposedly being mentally ill.

Meanwhile, a bunch of gangsters get wind of the situation and make a deal with the aunts to keep the baby away from the reading of the will. Sach and Slip sneak into the sanatorium under the guise of committing Sach where they help Laura escape. They make it to the reading of the will just in time and Laura and her son gain the inheritance and the aunts are arrested, along with the gangsters.

During the film Sach has a One Touch of Venus type longing for a store mannequin he calls Cynthia.

Cast

[edit]

The Bowery Boys

[edit]

Remaining cast

[edit]

Home media

[edit]

Warner Archives released the film on made-to-order DVD in the United States as part of "The Bowery Boys, Volume One" on November 23, 2012.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Hayes, David (1982). The Films of the Bowery Boys. Secaucus, NJ: The Citadel Press. ISBN 978-0806509310.
[edit]
Preceded by 'The Bowery Boys' movies
1946-1958
Succeeded by