The Party Crashers (1958) - Turner Classic Movies

The Party Crashers


1h 18m 1958

Film Details

Genre
Action
Drama
Release Date
Sep 1958
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Paramount Pictures Corp.; William Alland Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
Paramount Pictures Corp.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 18m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White

Synopsis

With no money to go drinking at "The Shack," a local youth hangout, on a Saturday night, teenager Twig Webster and his friends, Larry Bronsen, Don Hartlow, Sharon Lee and Mumps Thornberg, decide to crash a party being held by their schoolmate, Stan Osgood, at his parents' home. Though Twig and his gang are not welcomed by their upper class host, Stan is physically intimidated by the intruders and balks at asking them to leave. Soon, Twig's attentions are directed at the beautiful Barbara Nickerson, much to the consternation of her boyfriend, Josh Bickford. When the rowdy party crashers begin to tear up the Osgood home, Josh throws a punch at Twig, and Barbara tells Stan to call the police in order to stop the ensuing melee. Afterward, Josh walks the irate Barbara home, and she admits that she was attracted to Twig's "animal" nature. Back at his own home, Josh is greeted by his mother, whose concern for her emotionally reserved son is not shared by the boy's father, who feels they should respect their son's privacy. Meanwhile, Twig returns to his home just in time to witness his adulterous mother Hazel beat and humiliate his alcoholic father. The next morning, Josh is driven to the Nickersons' home by his father, who advises his son to buy the sports car he has been saving for, though the teenager is unsure of his future, not knowing if he will be drafted into military service or attend college after his high school graduation. Arriving at the Nickersons', Josh is surprised to see Twig, who has been asked over by Barbara's father Jim. After the two boys are forced to make amends to each other for their fight the previous night, Twig invites Josh and Barbara to go with him to "The Shack," though Josh wishes to play golf with their friends at the country club, as they regularly do each Sunday. Barbara, however, insists that they try something different and go to the pub. On his way to "The Shack," Twig stops at home for gas money, only to be told that his drunken father intends to sell his prized sports car if he and his friends crash another party. In direct defiance of his father, Twig convinces all the teenagers at "The Shack" to crash a party being held that night at a nearby lodge. Though Barbara insists on going to the party, Josh tells her he does not think they should. Upset that his credit has been cut off at Clancy's gas station, Twig takes out his aggression on Stan, claiming that he is beating Stan because he called the police the night before. At the lodge, Twig, Barbara, Josh and the other teens gain entrance into the party, but are surprised to discover it is being held by individuals their parents' age. Soon, the teenagers become captives of their intoxicated elders, and when one man tries to force Barbara to dance with him, a fight breaks out between Josh and the drunk. Meanwhile, Twig searches for a way to escape the lodge, only to discover his mother in a motel room with a strange man. Though he begs her to sneak out of the lodge with him, Hazel refuses, and in the subsequent struggle between mother and son, she falls down a flight of stairs and is critically injured. While trying to avoid the arriving police, Twig beats Barbara, demanding that she give him the keys to Josh's mother's car. Hearing her cries, Josh rushes to Barbara's aid, but the panic-stricken Twig beats him until the police appear. Later, at the police station, the Bickfords pledge to be more attentive parents to Josh. After his release from custody, Josh insists on visiting the hospitalized Barbara, and the two teens apologize to each other for the errors of their ways. Informed that his wife has died, Mr. Webster tells the authorities that his son, recently apprehended by the police, was at the lodge at his request. Twig and his father head back to the police station to file a report on the accident, and are reunited by both grief and a new commitment to each other.

Cast

Connie Stevens

Barbara Nickerson

Robert Driscoll

Josh Bickford

Mark Damon

Twig Webster

Frances Farmer

Mrs. Bickford

Doris Dowling

Hazel Webster

Walter Brooke

Mr. Webster

Cathy Lewis

Mrs. Nickerson

Denver Pyle

Ted Bickford

Theodora Davitt

Sharon Lee

Bob Padget

Mumps Thornberg

Gary Gray

Don Hartlow

Onslow Stevens

Jim Nickerson

Joseph Sonessa

Larry Bronsen

Gene Persson

Stan Osgood

Skip Torgerson

Bill Leeds

Jeremy Hunt

Boy at party

Michael Ross

Editor

George Cisar

Willy

Jean Engstrom

May

Greta Granstedt

Phyllis

Sid Clute

Clancy, in motel

Baynes Barron

Clancy, in garage

Hugh Lawrence

Police captain

Dick Davies

Police lieutenant

Robin Morse

Crane

Wilma Ewell

Mildred, a maid

James Cross

Frank

Cari Stevens

Girl in motel

Shirley Edgcomb

Girl in motel

Brandy Bryan

Girl in motel

Harriette Tarler

Girl in motel

Delia Salvi

Woman in motel

Phyllis Cole

Woman in motel

Max Power

Policeman

Carl Saxe

Policeman

Jeffrey Sayre

Policeman

Victor Paul

Policeman

Rudy Germane

Policeman

Al Paige

Prisoner

Courtland Shepard

Desk sergeant

Robert Moechel

Boy in court

Bill Meader

Detective

Mike Mahoney

Detective

Robert Whitesides

Boy at Stan's party

Tim Johnson

Boy at Stan's party

Lee Anthony

Boy at Stan's party

Titus Moede

Boy at Stan's party

Steffi Sidney

Girl at Stan's party

Cecile Rogers

Girl at Stan's party

Kevin Kelly

Girl at Stan's party

Dolores De Martin

Girl at Stan's party

Judy Brand

Girl at Stan's party

Joe Kelsey

Jake

Lowell Brown

Ted

Alan Aaronson

Ted Nickerson

Jim Johnson

Boy

Don Lyon

Billy

William Bloom

Waiter

Al Cavens

Waiter

Jill Marlyn

Girl at motel party

Film Details

Genre
Action
Drama
Release Date
Sep 1958
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Paramount Pictures Corp.; William Alland Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
Paramount Pictures Corp.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 18m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White

Articles

Doris Dowling (1923-2004)


Doris Dowling, the sultry actress who made a memorable film debut as the saloon hooker in Billy Wilder's The Lost Weekend died on June 18 in Los Angeles of natural causes. She was 81.

Doris Dowling was born on May 15, 1923 in Detroit, Michigan. She showed an interest in acting at a young age, and after a few years of stage work in the Midwest, she joined her older sister, the leading lady Constance Dowling, in Hollywood. Paramount soon took notice of the sultry brunette with the soulful expression and husky voice, and promptly signed her to a contract.

She made a stunning film debut as Gloria, the hooker who befriends Ray Milland at a bar, becoming his good-humored confidante in The Lost Weekend (1945); she followed that up in the overlooked, film noir gem, The Blue Dahlia (1946), playing Alan Ladd's shrewish wife before being killed by a mystery killer in the first reel. She made another noir thriller, the forgettable, The Crimson Key (1947), playing, once again, an unsympathetic part before heading off to Europe. Once there, Italian director Giuseppe de Santis used her effectively in Bitter Rice (1948), arguably her best performance as the jewelry thief hiding among women rice workers in Northern Italy; another notable role was as Bianca in Orson Welles' French production of Othello (1951).

She returned to Hollywood in the late '50s, and spent the next three decades doing television work: Bonanza, Perry Mason, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Barnaby Jones, and The Streets of San Francisco, just to name a few. She retired quietly from acting by the early '80s. She was briefly married to bandleader Artie Shaw (1952-56), and is survived by her son through that marriage, Jonathan; and her husband of 44 years, Leonard Kaufman.

by Michael T. Toole
Doris Dowling (1923-2004)

Doris Dowling (1923-2004)

Doris Dowling, the sultry actress who made a memorable film debut as the saloon hooker in Billy Wilder's The Lost Weekend died on June 18 in Los Angeles of natural causes. She was 81. Doris Dowling was born on May 15, 1923 in Detroit, Michigan. She showed an interest in acting at a young age, and after a few years of stage work in the Midwest, she joined her older sister, the leading lady Constance Dowling, in Hollywood. Paramount soon took notice of the sultry brunette with the soulful expression and husky voice, and promptly signed her to a contract. She made a stunning film debut as Gloria, the hooker who befriends Ray Milland at a bar, becoming his good-humored confidante in The Lost Weekend (1945); she followed that up in the overlooked, film noir gem, The Blue Dahlia (1946), playing Alan Ladd's shrewish wife before being killed by a mystery killer in the first reel. She made another noir thriller, the forgettable, The Crimson Key (1947), playing, once again, an unsympathetic part before heading off to Europe. Once there, Italian director Giuseppe de Santis used her effectively in Bitter Rice (1948), arguably her best performance as the jewelry thief hiding among women rice workers in Northern Italy; another notable role was as Bianca in Orson Welles' French production of Othello (1951). She returned to Hollywood in the late '50s, and spent the next three decades doing television work: Bonanza, Perry Mason, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Barnaby Jones, and The Streets of San Francisco, just to name a few. She retired quietly from acting by the early '80s. She was briefly married to bandleader Artie Shaw (1952-56), and is survived by her son through that marriage, Jonathan; and her husband of 44 years, Leonard Kaufman. by Michael T. Toole

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

According to a synopsis found in various Paramount press materials, the film's original ending had the character "Twig Webster" escape the police following their raid on the lodge. Twig then returns to Clancy's gas station, where he either tries to rob the cash register or steal a car, only to be shot and killed by "Clancy," the station's owner. A April 29, 1958 item in Hollywood Reporter's "Rambling Reporter" column mistakenly stated that actress Doris Dowling's sister Constance had been cast in the film.
       The Party Crashers was Frances Farmer's first film in sixteen years, having last appeared in the 1942 Twentieth Century-Fox production Son of Fury (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1941-50). It was also her final film. In 1970, after a series of personal setbacks, she died from cancer. The Party Crashers was also the final film by one-time child star Bobby Driscoll. Best known for his work at Walt Disney Studios, Driscoll suffered through a troubling adolescence and died in 1968, at the age of thirty-one, from the long-term effects of drug addiction.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States 1958

Release in USA December 1958.

Released in United States 1958