Paget married for the third time and quit the motion picture business. It is a pleasure to watch her dance and sing numbers as well as the way she gives Robert Wagner "love kicks" in the shins. Debra Paget, best known for her part four years later as the beautiful `Lilia the Water Girl' in the epic The Ten Commandments, gives this film all the levity of young romance and a love tension which the mature Webb-Hussy parts can not produce. Pepper Company in Philadelphia and commissioned the Sousaphone to be made in 1893, one year after Sousa gives up his directorship of the Marine Band. However, Sousa himself gave a personal interview to the Christian Science Monitor on and claims that he, Sousa, approached the J.W. Sousa takes a liking to Private Little and takes him into his band. The Little character comes to Sousa's home, unannounced, with a Sousaphone Little claims to have "invented" and had built for Sousa's march music to make the sound better than a standard tuba which is too brash a sound for a concert hall. The movie explains that Willie Little is a Marine Private who joins the Corps with the desire to perform in Sousa's Band. The name of Willie Little is not listed among them. A web site of the Dallas Wind Symphony has a listing of every band member who performed in Sousa's Band. Internet research reveals no existence of the two characters, Little and Becker, in real life. ![]() She is the `binder' of the Sousa household and the `understanding' wife behind the scenes. Hussy portrays the role of a wife and homemaker who runs the Sousa household and cajoles her husband to be sympathetic to the secret romance of Willie Little and Lily Becker. Research reveals that Sousa's wife's name was Jane van Middlesworth Bellis whom Sousa met during rehearsals for a stage play she was performing in. Ruth (Carol) Hussy at age 38 years plays Sousa's wife "Jennie" Sousa. ![]() Webb died in 1966 at the age of 77 years old. He carries the part of John Philip Sousa by standing straight with a stiff back, wearing many colorful marching band uniforms, looking very snobbishly "British" with a stiff demeanor while putting on the airs of a musical task-master demanding perfection, yet with a silent softness in his heart for the two younger performers, a 22 year old Robert (John) Wagner and the vivacious, effervescent, and energetic 18 year old Debra Paget (real name: Debralee Griffin). Clifton Webb doesn't really have to act in this film. Webb was a long time actor, singer, dancer, silent screen performer and theater performer before making this picture. While his written dialog is not all that dramatic, Mr. Clifton Webb (real name: Webb Parmalee Hollenbeck) was 63 years old when this movie was released in 1952. Most of the actors were not even credited in the films running credits. All other performers in this film are not interesting enough in character to comment upon. Use of appropriate byline/photo/image credits is requested.Watch this movie to get a historical perspective on some of America's and the World's Best Marching Band Music by John Philip Sousa! The film is a chronology of snippets about the life of John Philip Sousa, his wife, and two apparently fictional friends written into the movie to have a young romantic sub-plot. ![]() Information presented on the USMB web site is considered public information and may be distributed or copied. See Circular 1 "COPYRIGHT BASICS" from the U.S. Government employees are not eligible for copyright protection in the United States. Marine Corps Band, Generally speaking, works created by U.S. Works published before 1923 are now in the public domain and also in countries that figure copyright from the date of death of the artist (post mortem auctoris in this case John Philip Sousa March 6, 1932) and that most commonly run for a period of 50 to 70 years from December 31st of that year. This applies to the United States, where Works published prior to 1978 were copyright protected for a maximum of 75 years. Licence: This media file is in the public domain because its copyright has expired. In his autobiography, Marching Along, John Philip Sousa writes that he composed the march on Christmas Day 1896.
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