Pardon My Sarong

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Pardon My Sarong

Pardon My Sarong VHS Cover
Directed by Erle C. Kenton
Produced by Alex Gottlieb
Written by True Boardman
Nat Perrin
John Grant
Starring Bud Abbott
Lou Costello
Virginia Bruce
Robert Paige
Music by Charles Previn
Editing by Arthur Hilton
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) August 7, 1942 (U.S. release)
Running time 84 min
Language English
Budget $400,000
Preceded by Rio Rita (1942)
Followed by Who Done It? (1942)
IMDb profile

Pardon My Sarong is a 1942 comedy film starring Abbott and Costello.

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Tommy Layton (Robert Paige), a weathly bachelor, rents a city bus and rides it from Chicago to Los Angeles. Once there he intends to participate in a yacht race to Hawaii. The drivers of the bus, Algy (Bud Abbott) and Wellington (Lou Costello), are then chased by a detective (William Demarest) who was hired by the bus company. They escape capture by driving the bus off of a fishing pier. Layton, who is on his yacht already, rescues them and hires them as his crew for the race. A competitor of his in the race, Joan Marshall (Virginia Bruce) has fired his original crew without his knowledege. He enacts revange by kidnapping her and taking her along on the race.

While on course to Hawaii, they encounter a hurricane and land on an uncharted island, which is also the home of Dr. Varnoff (Lionel Atwill), a mysterious scientist. The island natives mistake Wellington as a legendary hero and inform him that he must marry Princess Luana (Nan Wynn). Meanwhile, Varnoff's plan is to cause the volcano to erupt in order to trick the tribe into giving them their sacred jewel. The natives send Wellington (and the jewel) to the volcano to defeat the evil spirit of the volcano. Varnoff chases him to the volcano, where they are defeated by Wellington and Algy.

  • It was filmed from March 2 through April 28, 1942.
  • The film was made at Mayfair Productions and was released by Universal Pictures.
  • The film's original draft, dated July 19, 1941, was titled Road to Montezuma.[1]
  • The film premiered in Costello's hometown of Paterson, New Jersey at a benefit for St. Anthony's Church.
  • It was re-released in 1948.
  • Maria Montez's scenes were eventually cut from the film.

  1. ^ Furmanek, Bob and Ron Palumbo (1991). Abbott and Costello in Hollywood. New York: Perigee Books. ISBN 0-399-51605-0
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