Federal Marshall Tex Miller, and his girl-friend Belinda Pendergast are having problems with the masked bandit 'Pecos Pete.'Federal Marshall Tex Miller, and his girl-friend Belinda Pendergast are having problems with the masked bandit 'Pecos Pete.'Federal Marshall Tex Miller, and his girl-friend Belinda Pendergast are having problems with the masked bandit 'Pecos Pete.'
Charles Ruggles
- Jim Pendergast
- (as Charlie Ruggles)
Chief Many Treaties
- Chief Big Thunder
- (as Bill Hazlet)
Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys
- Bob Wills' Band
- (as The Texas Playboys)
Hank Bell
- Jerry - the Bartender
- (uncredited)
Rudy Bowman
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Stanley Brown
- Dandy in Musical Number
- (uncredited)
Buck Bucko
- Posse Rider
- (uncredited)
Roy Bucko
- Posse Rider
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
This is yet another movie that is not on video and few have heard of that's well worth the viewing if you can catch it on cable. It's enough of western and musical to hold the interest of fans of both, plus good comedy thrown in. It's not too much of either western or musical to make the other seem out of place. Good numbers, good acting, funny lines all in 70 minutes and a chance for those not familiar with Western Swing to catch what that is. Ironically, the two best fight scenes include women. I gave it a 7, it's well worth the watch, much better than some 7's, well deserving and fun.
PENNY SINGLETON gets top billing in this diverting little programmer made at the height of her fame as "Blondie". This film, directed by the same man who did that series, has Singleton in her "Blondie" mode, as a prim and proper but ditsy blonde who acquits herself well when Indians are shooting at the carriage she's riding in during the opening scene.
She's so prim and proper that she refuses to even engage in conversation with the man sitting opposite her in the coach--GLENN FORD--on his way to the town of Headstone to become its new sheriff.
Ford has one of his rare comedy roles and plays it to the hilt. He's continually getting in the way of Singleton's pie-throwing finesse or taking a crack on the head with a pan, accidentally of course.
ALLEN JENKINS, as a cowardly interim sheriff, ANN MILLER, as a dance hall gal, and CHARLIE RUGGLES, as Singleton's uncle, all give fresh and funny performances. Miller is especially good in a couple of her dance routines, including a sing-and-dance number with Jenkins that comes as a delightful surprise.
Very enjoyable romp, it seems to borrow a lot of its material from other similar westerns. It features at least a half a dozen unpretentious musical numbers that make for easy listening.
Summing up: One of Columbia's better programmers.
She's so prim and proper that she refuses to even engage in conversation with the man sitting opposite her in the coach--GLENN FORD--on his way to the town of Headstone to become its new sheriff.
Ford has one of his rare comedy roles and plays it to the hilt. He's continually getting in the way of Singleton's pie-throwing finesse or taking a crack on the head with a pan, accidentally of course.
ALLEN JENKINS, as a cowardly interim sheriff, ANN MILLER, as a dance hall gal, and CHARLIE RUGGLES, as Singleton's uncle, all give fresh and funny performances. Miller is especially good in a couple of her dance routines, including a sing-and-dance number with Jenkins that comes as a delightful surprise.
Very enjoyable romp, it seems to borrow a lot of its material from other similar westerns. It features at least a half a dozen unpretentious musical numbers that make for easy listening.
Summing up: One of Columbia's better programmers.
10alanco
A Fun movie that will leave you wishing it had been another 45 minutes. The fight between Ann Miller and Penny Singleton is astounding! Ann Miller's Dance scenes are very good, and there is even an appearance by Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys. Penny was a great talent and her vaudeville experience shows. This movie even includes Glenn Ford.
Columbia's western comedy Go West Young Lady owes the fact that it was made to Harry Cohn seeing how successful Destry Rides Again was over at Universal for Carl Laemmle. The resemblance of Glenn Ford's character to lean and lanky Jimmy Stewart is unmistakable.
Ford and Penny Singleton arrive on the same stage to this frontier town where Penny is visiting her uncle Charlie Ruggles who owns the saloon and Ford has been appointed the new sheriff. Like the town of Bottleneck in Destry Rides Again the job of sheriff gives the owner a limited life expectancy.
Specifically Ford is sent there to get a Mexican bandit, Killer Pete, who's been terrorizing the territory and he's got an alliance with the local Indians, a deadly combination if ever I saw one in a western. This bandit is one clever dude, he seems to just disappear with no trail after every job.
Singleton is a western girl who can shoot like Annie Oakley, but she has a horrible sense of timing and hurts more than she helps poor Ford. Still it looks like love.
Providing the saloon entertainment is Ann Miller, The Foursome, and Bob Wills Texas Playboys Band. There are quite a few musical numbers in this more than in Destry and Go West Young Lady is a shorter running time. There's a really cute one with Ann Miller and Allen Jenkins where Jenkins laments he doesn't have the voice to be a singing cowboy.
And there's the obligatory chick fight between Singleton and Miller, not as good as the one involving Marlene Dietrich and Una Merkel, but it certainly can hold its own.
Taking time off from the Blondie series for Penny Singleton definitely proved worthwhile. The film is a pleasant diversion and gave Glenn Ford the first opportunity on screen to show his comic talents. He takes a pie in the face as good as any Keystone Cop.
Ford and Penny Singleton arrive on the same stage to this frontier town where Penny is visiting her uncle Charlie Ruggles who owns the saloon and Ford has been appointed the new sheriff. Like the town of Bottleneck in Destry Rides Again the job of sheriff gives the owner a limited life expectancy.
Specifically Ford is sent there to get a Mexican bandit, Killer Pete, who's been terrorizing the territory and he's got an alliance with the local Indians, a deadly combination if ever I saw one in a western. This bandit is one clever dude, he seems to just disappear with no trail after every job.
Singleton is a western girl who can shoot like Annie Oakley, but she has a horrible sense of timing and hurts more than she helps poor Ford. Still it looks like love.
Providing the saloon entertainment is Ann Miller, The Foursome, and Bob Wills Texas Playboys Band. There are quite a few musical numbers in this more than in Destry and Go West Young Lady is a shorter running time. There's a really cute one with Ann Miller and Allen Jenkins where Jenkins laments he doesn't have the voice to be a singing cowboy.
And there's the obligatory chick fight between Singleton and Miller, not as good as the one involving Marlene Dietrich and Una Merkel, but it certainly can hold its own.
Taking time off from the Blondie series for Penny Singleton definitely proved worthwhile. The film is a pleasant diversion and gave Glenn Ford the first opportunity on screen to show his comic talents. He takes a pie in the face as good as any Keystone Cop.
A pleasant, diverting, fast-paced, unpretentious musical Western. Shown frequently on commercial TV in the late '50s and '60s, it seems to have disappeared.
Will someone at Columbia Pictures please stop promoting their 2001 mega-budget stinkers and instead preserve and re-release their past glorious unsung treasures (such as "Go West, Young Lady") and make them available on cable-TV and videotape.
This "B"-unit film is an unalloyed delight. A precursor of such later films as "Calamity Jane" & "7 Brides for 7 Brothers". Penny Singleton is adorably ditzy as the heroine, Glenn Ford honed his comic skills as "the tenderfoot" and sparkling Ann Miller as the tart-tongued saloon-singer steals the show. The Sammy Cahn score is a treat, and Annie's tip-tapping with Allen Jenkins singing "I Wish That I could Be a Singing Cowboy" is one of the many highlights of this unique lark of a film.
Good, rousing, old-fashioned fun--packed into a tight 70 minutes!
Will someone at Columbia Pictures please stop promoting their 2001 mega-budget stinkers and instead preserve and re-release their past glorious unsung treasures (such as "Go West, Young Lady") and make them available on cable-TV and videotape.
This "B"-unit film is an unalloyed delight. A precursor of such later films as "Calamity Jane" & "7 Brides for 7 Brothers". Penny Singleton is adorably ditzy as the heroine, Glenn Ford honed his comic skills as "the tenderfoot" and sparkling Ann Miller as the tart-tongued saloon-singer steals the show. The Sammy Cahn score is a treat, and Annie's tip-tapping with Allen Jenkins singing "I Wish That I could Be a Singing Cowboy" is one of the many highlights of this unique lark of a film.
Good, rousing, old-fashioned fun--packed into a tight 70 minutes!
Did you know
- TriviaReleased 11 days before the attack on Pearl Harbor.
- GoofsWhen Tex gets hit in the face with a pie the second time, the batter is only over the lower half of his face. When he walks into the sheriff's office to resign, it covers his entire face.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Frances Farmer Presents: Go West, Young Lady (1958)
- SoundtracksIda Red
Written by Wava White (uncredited)
New lyrics and arrangement by Bob Wills and Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys
- How long is Go West, Young Lady?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Amazona enamorada
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 10m(70 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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