Waldo's Last Stand is a 1940 Our Gang short comedy film directed by Edward Cahn. It was the 193rd Our Gang short (194th episode, 105th talking short, 106th talking episode, and 25th MGM produced episode) that was released.
Waldo's Last Stand | |
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Directed by | Edward Cahn |
Written by | Hal Law Robert A. McGowan |
Produced by | Jack Chertok Richard Goldstone for MGM |
Starring | Mickey Gubitosi Darla Hood George McFarland Carl Switzer Billie Thomas Darwood Kaye Leonard Landy Billy Laughlin |
Cinematography | Jackson Rose |
Edited by | Albert Akst |
Distributed by | MGM |
Release date |
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Running time | 10:39 |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $18,974 (estimated) |
The gang offers to help Waldo attract customers to his lemonade stand which is doing poor business. Redecorating their barn as a lavish nightclub, the kids stage an elaborate floor show, with Darla as the star vocalist. Unfortunately, their efforts attract only one patron—a surly, stone-faced new kid named Froggy.[1] Spanky and the others try to persuade Froggy into buying a drink, even going as far as singing an impromptu song about dryness and thirst, but to no avail. The kids then come up with an idea: to put a heater under Froggy which would heat him up and force him to buy a drink. When Spanky asks Froggy why he would not buy a drink, Froggy responds that he does not have any money and that it is too hot in the barn. The gang realizes that no one other than Froggy showed up for the show because all the other neighborhood kids were either participants in the show or somehow connected with its production.
Lavonne Battle, Shirley Jean Doble, Donna Jean Edmonsond, Helen Guthrie, Patsy Irish, Jackie Krenk, Bobby Sommers, Betty Jean Striegler (Betta St. John), Mary Ann Such, Patsy Anne Thompson, Patricia Wheeler