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Ann Sheridan in It All Came True (1940)

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It All Came True

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For the 1945 re-release print, Warner Bros. changed the opening credits order for their new star Humphrey Bogart, now listing him above Ann Sheridan before the title and moving Jeffrey Lynn to the "With" cast after the title. The end credits, however, were kept in their original order.
The soundtrack opening tune, "Angel in Disguise," was often used in Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoons since Warners owned the copyright. This was typical Warner's policy, lowering production costs by using music the studio owned rather than paying for newly composed music.
Producer Mark Hellinger's dislike for executive producer Hal B. Wallis became even stronger after this film was released. Though the film was critically acclaimed and made money for Warners, print ads at the time mentioned Wallis as executive producer (though uncredited on the film), Jack L. Warner in charge of production, and Lewis Seiler as director but did not mention Hellinger, who had received screen credit as producer. This was one of the contributing factors in Hellinger's shortly thereafter leaving Warners for 20th Century-Fox. (Source: "The Mark Hellinger Story" by Jim Bishop, New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1952)
The version of this film that's shown on TCM is from its 1945 re-release, for which Warners changed the opening titles to give Humphrey Bogart first billing (by that point, he was a bigger box office draw than Ann Sheridan).
One of 6 films in which both Humphrey Bogart and Ann Sheridan appear in released from 1937 to 1940.

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