AFI Catalog of Feature Films
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The Return of the Whistler
Director: D. Ross Lederman (Dir)
Release Date:   18 Mar 1948
Production Date:   13 Oct--23 Oct 1947
Duration (in mins):   62-63
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Cast:   Michael Duane (Ted Nichols)  
    Lenore Aubert (Alice Dupres Barkley)  
    Richard Lane (Gaylord Traynor)  
    James Cardwell (John, assumed name of Charlie)  
    Ann Shoemaker (Mrs. Barkley)  
    Sarah Padden (Mrs. Hulskamp)  
    Wilton Graff (Dr. Grantland)  
    Olin Howlin (Jeff Anderson)  
    Eddy Waller (Sam)  
    Trevor Bardette (Arnold)  
    Ann Doran (Sybil)  
    Edgar Dearing (Captain Griggs)  
    Abigail Adams (Secretary)  
    Fred Sears (Crandall)  
    William Newell (Painter)  
    Jack Rice (Sawyer)  
    Isabel Withers (Nurse)  
    Harry Strang (Police sergeant)  
    Steve Benton (Male nurse)  
    Dolores Castle (Nurse)  

Summary: Late one night, young civil engineer Ted Nichols and his French-born fiancĂ©e, widow Alice Dupres Barkley, brave rain-swept country roads hoping to find a justice of the peace who will perform an on-the-spot wedding. Their hopes are dashed, however, when they are told that the justice of the peace is away for the night. The couple's misfortunes soon multiply when their car, which has been tampered with by a mysterious man who has been following them, breaks down in a small town that has no available hotel rooms. Although Ted manages to get a room by bribing a hotel night clerk, he is later forbidden by the clerk from staying with Alice because they are not married. Ted leaves Alice at the hotel for the night and takes the car to a garage for repair, but when he returns the next morning, he finds that Alice has disappeared. The night clerk tells Ted that Alice fled to New York, but Ted refuses to accept the clerk's story. Overhearing the angry dispute between Ted and the hotel staff, private detective Gaylord Traynor offers his services to Ted and goes to his apartment with him. Traynor, however, is in the employ of Alice's husband's family, the Barkleys. Ted tells Traynor that he met Alice only two weeks earlier, and knows little more about her other than the fact that she is a widow who came to America from France in search of her husband's father. Ted also explains that he met Alice at his summer cottage while she was fleeing from her husband's cruel family. After Ted hands Traynor Alice's photograph and her marriage license, the detective knocks Ted unconscious and flees. Traynor delivers Alice's papers to the Barkleys, who have abducted the widow and are scheming to wrest away the fortunes she stands to inherit. Immediately after regaining consciousness, Ted goes to the Barkley estate, where he meets Charlie, who claims that he is Alice's husband John. Charlie, who is actually one of the scheming Barcleys, tells Ted that Alice suffers from mental delusions and occasionally believes that she is a widow. Ted is then taken to see Alice, who has been coerced into confirming the family's story. Later, the Barkleys commit Alice to a sanitarium to keep her out of their way. Ted questions whether the Barkleys have told him the truth and begins searching for Alice. He eventually finds her in a straight jacket at the Woodland Sanitarium, but when he attempts to escape with her, Charlie blocks his path. Ted manages to overpower Charlie, though, and Traynor, who, having discovered that he was hired by Charlie under false pretenses, arrives with the police in time to arrest Charlie and the rest of the Barkley family. With their troubles behind them, Ted and Alice resume their marriage plans and return to the justice of the peace. 

Production Company: Darmour, Inc.  
Distribution Company: Columbia Pictures Corp.  
Director: D. Ross Lederman (Dir)
  Carl Hiecke (Asst dir)
Producer: Rudolph C. Flothow (Prod)
Writer: Edward Bock (Scr)
  Maurice Tombragel (Scr)
  Cornell Woolrich (Story)
Photography: Philip Tannura (Dir of photog)
  Victor Scheurich (Cam)
  Joe Walters (Still photog)
Art Direction: George Brooks (Art dir)
Film Editor: Dwight Caldwell (Film ed)
Set Decoration: James Crowe (Set dec)
Music: Mischa Bakaleinikoff (Mus dir)
Sound: Jack Goodrich (Sd tech)
Make Up: Helen Hunt (Hairstylist)
Production Misc: Donna Norridge (Scr supv)
Country: United States
Series: Whistler

Music: "The Whistler" theme music by Wilbur Hatch.
Composer: Wilbur Hatch
Source Text: Suggested by the radio series The Whistler created by J. Donald Wilson (16 May 1942--8 Sep 1955).
Authors: J. Donald Wilson

Copyright Claimant Copyright Date Copyright Number
Columbia Pictures Corp. 18/3/1948 dd/mm/yyyy LP1823

PCA NO: 12751
Physical Properties: b&w:
  Sd: Western Electric Recording

 
Genre: Drama
  Drama
Sub-Genre: Crime
  Psychological
 
Subjects (Major): Engagements
  Impersonation and imposture
  In-laws
  Kidnapping
  Missing persons
  Romance
  Sanitariums
 
Subjects (Minor): Escapes
  Fistfights
  French
  Hotel clerks
  Inheritance
  Investigations
  Justices of the peace
  Police
  Private detectives
  Rainstorms
  Sabotage
  Widows

Note: This was the last of eight films in Columbia's "The Whistler" series. While contemporary reviews and Columbia publicity materials list the names of the characters played by Lenore Aubert and Richard Lane as "Alice Barclay" and "Gaylord Travers," respectively, their last names appear in the film spelled "Barkley" and "Traynor." This was the only film in the "Whistler" series that did not star Richard Dix. For additional information on the series, please consult the Series Index and see entry below for The Whistler

Bibliographic Sources:   Date   Page
Box Office   13 Mar 1948.   
Daily Variety   18 Mar 48   p. 3.
Motion Picture Herald Product Digest   21 Feb 48   p. 4069.
Motion Picture Herald Product Digest   6 Mar 48   p. 4086.
Variety   3 Mar 48   p. 8.

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The American Film Institute is grateful to Sir Paul Getty KBE and the Sir Paul Getty KBE Estate for their dedication to the art of the moving image and their support for the AFI Catalog of Feature Films and without whose support AFI would not have been able to achieve this historical landmark in this epic scholarly endeavor.
 
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