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  • The bull riders of the PBR would be aghast at how easy Sally Payne and Mary Treen make riding a bull look so easy.

    In this amusing short subject from MGM Sally and Mary are a pair of not too bright waitresses who would like to leave the west for home which is Kokomo, Indiana. What better than to sneak onto a trailer marked Kokomo. It has to be heading their way.

    As it turns out the trailer belongs to Johnny Weissmuller and he owns a champion bucking bull which is headed for the rodeo in Palm Springs. Of course during the trip they and the bull Kokomo get good and acquainted. That helps later on.

    Hollywood stars like Gene Autry, Rudy Vallee, Tom Mix, Mickey Rooney, Joe E. Brown and Roy Rogers make an appearance. Not to mention old Tarzan himself Johnny Weissmuller.

    Payne and Treen are funny women. You'll enjoy this one.
  • Sally Payne and Mary Treen are hitchhiking from Hollywood to Kokomo, only to wind up in a trailer heading to the Palm Springs Rodeo with a bull.

    It's one of Louis Lewyn's star-studded shorts, with Johnny Weissmuller, Tom Mix , Roy Rogers, and Joe E. Brown in a handsome beard showing up in the first couple of minutes.

    Lewyn had risen to prominence producing and directing Columbia's SCREEN SNAPSHOTS series. Later he was in charge of similar series for Tiffany and then Paramount. By the middle of the 1930s, he was producing star-studded Technicolor shorts for MGM like HOLLYWOOD PARTY. This was among the last of his almost 90 productions. He died in 1969, aged 77.
  • SnoopyStyle28 February 2022
    Mary and Sally are hitch-hiking home to Kokomo, Indiana. They end up in a rodeo. This is a fun little short. It's light. It has a few passing cameos from a real Rodeo. I don't really know who are Sally Payne and Mary Treen. Treen seems familiar. They have good chemistry. These girls are willing to get muddied for the laughs. That's good enough for me.
  • This short is amusing fluff for the most part, but it's real interest lies in the fact that it shows the Palm Springs California Rodeo, circa 1940, which is no longer an annual event. It was called "the rodeo of the stars" in it's heyday.

    The rodeo was staged in the south end of town near the Smoke Tree area, which was near Walt Disneys ranch. Today it is a shopping center.

    The film also shows some scenes of the festive parade on Palm Canyon Drive where many stars were seen in cowboy finery.

    The El Mirador Hotel is seen in one shot, which was converted into a hospital and is preserved today as part of the Desert Regional Hospital.

    Historically, this film is a gem.