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IMDbPro

Swing Out, Sweet Land

  • TV Movie
  • 1970
  • 1h 13m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
262
YOUR RATING
John Wayne in Swing Out, Sweet Land (1970)
ComedyFamilyHistoryMusic

John Wayne and an all-star cast tell the story of America.John Wayne and an all-star cast tell the story of America.John Wayne and an all-star cast tell the story of America.

  • Director
    • Stan Harris
  • Writers
    • Paul Keyes
    • John Aylesworth
  • Stars
    • John Wayne
    • Ann-Margret
    • Lucille Ball
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    262
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Stan Harris
    • Writers
      • Paul Keyes
      • John Aylesworth
    • Stars
      • John Wayne
      • Ann-Margret
      • Lucille Ball
    • 12User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos5

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    Top cast51

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    John Wayne
    John Wayne
    • John Wayne - Host
    Ann-Margret
    Ann-Margret
    • Entertainer at Valley Forge
    Lucille Ball
    Lucille Ball
    • Statue of Liberty
    • (voice)
    Jack Benny
    Jack Benny
    • Man Who Finds Silver Dollar
    Dan Blocker
    Dan Blocker
    • Indian Who Sells Manhattan
    Roscoe Lee Browne
    Roscoe Lee Browne
    • Frederick Douglass
    Glen Campbell
    Glen Campbell
    • Self
    Johnny Cash
    Johnny Cash
    • Johnny Cash
    Roy Clark
    Roy Clark
    • Banjo Player at Andrew Jackson's Inaugural
    Bing Crosby
    Bing Crosby
    • Mark Twain
    Phyllis Diller
    Phyllis Diller
    • Belva A. Lockwood
    Lorne Greene
    Lorne Greene
    • George Washington
    Celeste Holm
    Celeste Holm
    • Nancy Lincoln
    Bob Hope
    Bob Hope
    • Self - Entertaining Troops at Valley Forge
    Michael Landon
    Michael Landon
    • Peter Minuit
    Dean Martin
    Dean Martin
    • Eli Whitney
    Ross Martin
    Ross Martin
    • Alexander Hamilton
    Greg Morris
    Greg Morris
    • Crispus Attucks
    • Director
      • Stan Harris
    • Writers
      • Paul Keyes
      • John Aylesworth
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    7.4262
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    Featured reviews

    10friedmad

    We need television like this today!

    For many years, the wonderful montage of each guest singing a line from "God Bless America" stayed with me. I managed to find a cassette of the show and got chills watching it again. They don't make shows like this anymore...I can't imagine a group of today's stars so large who I'd care to see at all. What would it take to get this special seen on TV again? In our post-9/11 world, it would be a nostalgic reminder of a generation that APPRECIATED where we came from, and what LIBERTY and FREEDOM are all about. To anyone reading this who may own the rights to this special, bring it back on video and you'll find a very receptive public.
    4F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    Bob Hope gooses Ann-Margret.

    'Swing Out, Sweet Land' is the deeply annoying title of a variety special that's actually fairly entertaining. Because this special allegedly has something to do with American history, IMDb have listed it as a 'documentary'. Actually, this is a comedy/variety special that presents a series of skits (most of them attempting to be funny, a few of them serious) with modern actors impersonating figures from American history. Oddly, two of the U.S. Presidents depicted here are played by Canadian actors: Lorne Greene as Washington, William Shatner as John Adams. The whole affair was a personal project of John Wayne, and was produced by his company Batjac Productions.

    I attended a press screening of this special in London in 1971. A Batjac rep was hoping to persuade British TV producers (one of them my employer) to buy the UK syndication rights. Unsurprisingly, British TV producers were chary to give British audiences a programme dealing entirely with American history, much of it concerning America's War of Independence against Britain. 'Swing Out, Sweet Land' was never transmitted in the UK.

    CONTAINS SPOILERS. Most of the humour here is simple displacement of 1970s showbiz personalities into earlier eras. Bob Hope shows up in a tricorn at Valley Forge for Christmas 1776, doing his usual shtick of entertaining the troops (who look surprisingly well-fed, well-dressed and warm ... in what's clearly an indoor set). Ann-Margret, in a mob cap and petticoats, does a dance routine for the enthusiastic soldiers, lifting her skirts surprisingly high for the 18th century. Then Bob Hope sings his usual 'Thanks for the Memories', with Revolution-era lyrics: 'We all hold very dear / that patriot Revere. / He rode all night to aid our plight, but just think of his ... rear!' On the word 'rear', Hope pauses slightly and he gooses Ann-Margret, and she squeals in delight! That's the biggest surprise here.

    Phyllis Diller shows up as Belva Lockwood, the first woman to stand for election as U.S. President (1884 & 1888), and also the first woman lawyer to plead a case before the Supreme Court. Unfortunately, Diller's turn here is treated largely as a joke. In fairness to Diller, Belva Lockwood's political campaigns were largely regarded as a joke in the 1880s.

    Lorne Greene, in elaborate costume and wig, is seen as President Washington. As he walks away from his advisors, he is confronted by Jack Benny in 18th-century costume but wearing his usual hornrims. Benny tentatively asks Washington if the rumour is true that he once threw a dollar across the Potomac. When Washington confirms this, Benny nervously asks if Washington would be able to identify the dollar. When Washington answers in the negative, Benny replies: 'Good. So I can keep this one, then.' Ha bloody ha.

    Dean Martin shows up as the inventor of the cotton gin, just so he can drunkenly belch 'Keep yer cotton-pickin' hands off my gin.' The rule in this special tends to be that white figures in American history will be mocked for cheap laughs, but black figures in American history will be depicted respectfully (though not always effectively).

    The most bizarre turn is a dead-earnest skit featuring Red Skelton as a newspaper printer in Philadelphia in 1776, with Tom Smothers as his assistant; I leave it to you to imagine how these two actors look in 18th-century work clothes. They've been hired to run off copies of a new document called the Declaration of Independence. Smothers nervously feels that perhaps they shouldn't print this document; it defies King George, and it might just stir up trouble. Skelton reads off a few passages of the galley proof -- something about freedom and liberty -- and he hands it to Smothers with the verdict 'Print it.' Much as I admire John Wayne's sentiments in producing 'Sing Out, Sweet Land', I found this sequence extremely sententious and a little too pleased with its own boldness. I still have the press kit from the London screening I attended. The text in the press kit attempts to make a great deal of the fact that conservative John Wayne and liberal Tom Smothers had divergent political beliefs, yet were able to work together amicably to make this special. Right, so what? Tom Smothers is a member of the establishment, even if he pretends otherwise, and he wasn't going to rock the boat to compromise this special. The press kit mentions that Wayne and Smothers got along just fine during rehearsals by avoiding politics altogether. 'We talked about sailing,' Smothers is quoted in the press kit.

    There's really nothing of great interest in 'Swing Out, Sweet Land' unless you're a fan of one of the performers in this cast ... and even then you'd have to be a completist. The comedy here isn't especially funny. As for the serious stuff: I'd be delighted to watch a special that gives respectful tribute to the subject of America's greatness ... but this special ain't it. I'll rate 'Sing Out, Sweet Land' 4 out of 10, purely for its novelty value.
    shipoopi

    Great entertainment for a great price

    Purchased this at Wal-Mart for under $10.00 and it's worth every cent. Too bad more Variety specials aren't available on DVD.

    This show isn't meant to be a 'written in stone' history lesson. It's just what the title suggests: "Swing Out, Sweet Land". Maybe because it is hosted by John Wayne that so many of his contemporary thespians are in this or because of just about every big name on NBC at the time, but I found it quite enjoyable.

    I had heard of this special before seeing it because it is mentioned during an episode of my favorite show "All in the Family." So when I saw this I had to have it just to see what I had missed all those years ago (I was only nine and never had control of what to watch). Since they don't produce specials anymore I loved watching all the corny sketches and sincere songs; seeing all the true "stars" of days gone bye having a bit of fun. That's what "SO,SL" was too - fun with just a dash of patriotic preaching that is so politically incorrect these days. And that's a shame we've moved in that direction.
    8Aldanoli

    A curio of its day (and of its participants) as much as anything else

    Even those who aren't fans of John Wayne would probably still enjoy this series of vignettes that Wayne narrates almost like the Stage Manager in "Our Town," stepping from era to era through a few centuries of American history. Wayne had been burned in his earliest foray into television nearly two decades earlier: Making a guest appearance on a variety show in 1953 while his movie "Hondo" was in theatres, he was supposed to act like he didn't know why the audience was reacting, and then every time he turned around he'd press a button in his pants and a sign on his back would light up to say "Hondo." The indignity of the appearance embarrassed him enough so that, except for rare guest appearances on shows like "I Love Lucy," Wayne avoided television for most of the next 20 years. "Swing Out, Sweet Land" gave him a chance to show his unabashed red-white-and-blue sentiments and to feel far more comfortable in front of the television cameras.

    Still, although it's an enjoyable and a somewhat tongue-in-cheek television special, sticking to many of the clichés of the American history genre, it's also very much a curio of its era -- when you could spend a couple of hours recounting those clichés as history, and also present them by featuring a raft of then-current celebrities often doing their own shtick as a counterpoint to the history -- Jack Benny (of course!) finding the silver dollar that Washington threw across the Delaware; Roy Clark as a banjo player at Andy Jackson's funeral; even Rowan and Martin as the Wright Brothers! You won't find the kind of insight that Ken Burns puts forth on his PBS series, certainly . . . and, as history, perhaps its most poignant feature is realizing just how many of the folks who were well-known at that time (like Wayne himself, Benny, Lucille Ball, Bing Crosby, Lorne Greene, Michael Landon, Greg Morris, and even Ricky Nelson) are themselves already gone.
    9dacsus-78089

    Dated but Timeless

    The fact John Wayne comes out and says these tales are "tongue in cheek" goes a long way in these vignettes about America. He admits that some times settlers did not behave correctly, which is nice. Some stereotypes are hard to watch, but we need to remember that 50 years ago what was acceptable may not be acceptable today. The jokes are funny/corny, the tales are fun to watch, and the songs are good to sing along to.

    I find it interesting that in 1970 there were people protesting (some of whom are on this variety show) but they still came together with the conservatives like Wayne, Ball, and Ann-Margaret to celebrate America in song, dance, and jokes. Today, it seems people are too firmly identified as "pro" or "con" to come together to celebrate the idea of America. Yet this shows it can be done, there is room for moderates in this world.

    We can still be proud.

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    Music

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      At least two of the stars are from Canada: Lorne Greene and William Shatner.
    • Connections
      Referenced in All in the Family: Writing the President (1971)
    • Soundtracks
      It Was Good Enough For Grandma
      Written by Harold Arlen & E.Y. Harburg

      Performed by Ann-Margret

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 29, 1970 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • John Wayne's Tribute to America
    • Filming locations
      • Bodie State Historic Park, California, USA(ghost town)
    • Production companies
      • Yongestreet Productions
      • Batjac Productions
      • Darcy Advertising Co.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 13m(73 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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