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IMDbPro

Here Come the Co-eds

  • 1945
  • Approved
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
Bud Abbott, Lou Costello, Martha O'Driscoll, and Peggy Ryan in Here Come the Co-eds (1945)
Comedy

Two bumblers become caretakers at an all-girls' college. During their misadventures, the duo raise money to free the school from its traditionally-minded landlord.Two bumblers become caretakers at an all-girls' college. During their misadventures, the duo raise money to free the school from its traditionally-minded landlord.Two bumblers become caretakers at an all-girls' college. During their misadventures, the duo raise money to free the school from its traditionally-minded landlord.

  • Director
    • Jean Yarbrough
  • Writers
    • Edmund L. Hartmann
    • Arthur T. Horman
    • John Grant
  • Stars
    • Bud Abbott
    • Lou Costello
    • Peggy Ryan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    1.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jean Yarbrough
    • Writers
      • Edmund L. Hartmann
      • Arthur T. Horman
      • John Grant
    • Stars
      • Bud Abbott
      • Lou Costello
      • Peggy Ryan
    • 24User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos64

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    Top cast41

    Edit
    Bud Abbott
    Bud Abbott
    • Slats McCarthy
    Lou Costello
    Lou Costello
    • Oliver Quackenbush
    Peggy Ryan
    Peggy Ryan
    • Patty Gayle
    Martha O'Driscoll
    Martha O'Driscoll
    • Molly McCarthy
    June Vincent
    June Vincent
    • Diane Kirkland
    Lon Chaney Jr.
    Lon Chaney Jr.
    • Johnson
    • (as Lon Chaney)
    Donald Cook
    Donald Cook
    • Dean Larry Benson
    Charles Dingle
    Charles Dingle
    • Jonathan Kirkland
    Richard Lane
    Richard Lane
    • Near-Sighted Man at Ballroom
    Joe Kirk
    Joe Kirk
    • Honest Dan Murphy the Bookie
    Bill Stern
    Bill Stern
    • Bill Stern - Sports Announcer
    Phil Spitalny
    • Phil Spitalny - Orchestra Leader
    Evelyn Kaye Klein
    Evelyn Kaye Klein
    • Evelyn
    • (as Evelyn and Her Magic Violin)
    Phil Spitalny and His All-Girl Orchestra
    • Orchestra
    Ruth Lee
    Ruth Lee
    • Miss Holford
    • (unconfirmed)
    Jane Allen
    • College Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Milt Bronson
    Milt Bronson
    • Ring Announcer
    • (uncredited)
    Jean Carlin
    • Co-Ed
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Jean Yarbrough
    • Writers
      • Edmund L. Hartmann
      • Arthur T. Horman
      • John Grant
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews24

    6.61.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7frankebe

    Costello without a stuntman

    FINALLY Costello does something physically brilliant without rear-projection. Originally I did not want to bother with a review of this cute little piece of fluff, but I have to respond to the reviewer who thought the basketball episode was fake. ONLY the final throw is a matte-job, and this is SUPPOSED to be goofy. You can stop-action through all the other shots Costello makes and it's really him and the ball. Although the movie should have been better written, this turns out to have the most fulfilling Costello scene in all the 8 movies of Volume 1 and the first 5 of this volume (I haven't watched the last 3).

    My two criticisms of the film itself are that some of the songs are boring, and the ending makes no sense. But it does have the Dance Escorts vaudeville scene, Car 13, Rolling the Dice, a song and almost-dance with Costello and Peggy Ryan, Under Covers sketch, Costello's version of Oyster Chowder, and some great solo dancing by Ryan. And personally, I liked the violin concerto because the close-ups show so well how cleverly a violinist must negotiate this piece.
    ducatimatz28

    Here come the Coeds produced two Castle Film Shorts in 1949!

    Castle films extracted the best scenes from this feature and made two 8mm/16mm shorts "Fun on the Run" and "Oysters and Muscles" for the home film market.This was done in 1949 and both titles were among the most popular of all the A&C Castle shorts.If you look up on Ebay you can see both titles listed numerous times during the year.Most are regular 8mm,as 16mm sound was usually to expensive for the average home market user.

    I have collected 16mm Castle Films since the 1960's.Before VHS & DVD,s came along, 16mm optical sound track was basically the only format for showing sound edition prints. When super 8mm came on the scene in the later 60's you could buy magnetic sound super 8 prints...

    It was reported that after A&C had split up and weren't under contract to Universal pictures any longer;Lou Costello sued Castle Films for unpaid royalties he believed were due him from Castle's Home Market sales.I believe it was never settled as Costello died in 1959 and Castle Films continued on well into the 70's before becoming Universal 8...s.m.
    7bkoganbing

    "Positions Girls, Positions."

    The main attraction in Here Come the Coeds is seeing Lou Costello in drag during a girl's college basketball game. One of the players is injured and he substitutes. When he's conked on the head he develops amnesia and then Abbott and Peggy Ryan tell him he's Daisy Dimple the world's greatest female basketball player and he proceeds to act the part.

    Some here have said that Costello was hardly convincing in drag. But I have to say I've seen drag performers a whole lot worse.

    Abbott and Costello are paid dancing escorts at a dime a dance palace. Why anyone would pay to dance with Costello is anyone's guess. But they get fired and land jobs at a girl's college where Abbott's sister, June Vincent, enrolls due to a publicity gimmick Abbott thought up.

    There was some other comment that this was the only time any female, Peggy Ryan, showed an interest romantically in Lou. Not true at all. In previous films Martha Raye and Joan Davis did. But this was the only film Costello got to do a song and dance with a female partner. He did do an outrageous waltz with Joan Davis in Hold That Ghost, but there was no singing.

    Peggy Ryan was doing a whole lot of musicals with Donald O'Connor at the time at Universal. She had a nice fresh appeal and partnered well with O'Connor. Working with Costello must have been something different.

    Donald Cook as the Dean of Students is paired with June Vincent. As they are a pretty sappy pair fortunately there's not much film wasted on them. Charles Dingle as the head of the board of trustees fares much better. He's his usual pompous stuffed shirt, a part he played like no one else in film history. I wish they'd given him some comedy bits with the boys.

    Lon Chaney, Jr. plays the head caretaker and the nemesis of the boys. He gets right in with the comedy and serves as a great foil for Costello, especially in the wrestling match sequence. It's a ripoff of what they'd done in Buck Privates in a boxing match, but who cares, it's still a very funny sequence.

    I saw just about all of Abbott and Costello's films as a lad. WPIX television in New York used to run them constantly on Sunday morning. For some reason Here Come the Coeds wasn't among them, I only got to see it a few years ago. But it was worth the wait.
    8hitchcockthelegend

    Busy, Bonkers Burlesque.

    Here Come The Co-Eds is a film starring the comedy team of Abbott and Costello. It's directed by Jean Yarbrough and acting support comes from Peggy Ryan, Martha O'Driscoll, June Vincent, Lon Chaney Jr. & Donald Cook. Plot finds the bumbling duo at Bixby College for young ladies, where they get involved in numerous escapades in trying to save the school from closure.

    Easily one of Abbott and Costello's best film's, Here Come the Co-Eds finds the boys hitting the high laugh standards they set themselves at their peak. Even the familiar routines are given new life as they seem to respond well to Yarbrough's smooth direction. Top moments are a glue based kitchen sequence, a wrestling match, a basketball game and an excellent boat (on the road) chase finale. Film is boosted considerably by the presence of Phil Spitalny's all-girl 'Hour of Charm' orchestra and the sprightly Peggy Ryan. The latter of which helps provide a show stopper of a tap routine at the basketball match.

    Tomfoolery unbound, and with a good production value to boot, this is classic A&C and prescribed to lift the blues. 8/10
    7kevinolzak

    Peggy Ryan and Lon Chaney

    1945's "Here Come the Co-eds" was the last great Abbott and Costello picture until at least 1947's "The Wistful Widow of Wagon Gap," pairing Lou with the pretty and vivacious Peggy Ryan, already a veteran of a dozen films opposite regular musical co-star Donald O'Connor. Like The Marx Brothers, A & C were at their best in surroundings where they didn't belong, and working as caretakers at an all-girl college would be a dream job for any romantic fool. As Patty Gayle, perky Peggy Ryan shines as Costello's love interest, doing a charming song and dance called 'Let's Play House,' each in turn lascivious or childlike, Lou even prefacing the number by remarking, "I feel just like Donald O'Connor!" as Peggy smiles knowingly. Another rarity is giving Bud Abbott a sister in Martha O'Driscoll's Molly (despite the 27 year age difference!), who earns a scholarship to Bixby College, greatly improving their basketball team. The climactic game between Bixby and Carlisle gives Costello the opportunity to show why he used to be free throw champion of Paterson, New Jersey, making all the actual shots without missing, except for the final trick shot that bounces from one basket to the other (11 years later, he showed he still had it, effortlessly sinking a free throw for 'The Armory Five' on THIS IS YOUR LIFE). Three years before "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein," Lon Chaney first encounters the team as the conniving caretaker, 'Strangler' Johnson, his best scene after Costello swallows his dice, making bets with Abbott by checking Lou through a fluoroscope! There's a comic wrestling match between Lou and Lon (the latter disguised as 'The Masked Marvel'), and one with Lou trying to eat oyster stew as its live occupant refuses to cooperate (revised for a frog in "The Wistful Widow of Wagon Gap," then disguised as whale meat in "Lost in Alaska"). Lon Chaney worked with Martha O'Driscoll in several pictures ("Crazy House," "Follow the Boys," "Ghost Catchers," "The Daltons Ride Again" and "House of Dracula"), while reuniting with Peggy Ryan in her penultimate film, 1949's "There's a Girl in My Heart," featuring several other former Universal players- Lee Bowman ("Buck Privates"), Gloria Jean ("Never Give a Sucker an Even Break"), and Elyse Knox ("Hit the Ice," "The Mummy's Tomb").

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Lou Costello, in his youth a basketball player who specialized in dead-eye free-throw shooting, pumped in many of the shots himself during the film's basketball game.
    • Goofs
      The film's title is a misnomer. A "co-ed" is a female student attending a gender-mixed college -- but Bixby is an all-girl school and therefore none of its students are co-eds.
    • Quotes

      Oliver Quackenbush: I really don't like dancing because it's nothing but hugging set to music.

      Woman in Trailer: What don't you like about it?

      Oliver Quackenbush: The music.

    • Connections
      Edited into Oysters and Muscles (1948)
    • Soundtracks
      Jumping On A Saturday Night
      Lyrics by Jack Brooks

      Music by Edgar Fairchild

      Performed by Peggy Ryan

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 2, 1945 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Fun on the Run
    • Filming locations
      • North Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Universal Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $717,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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