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(3) 1958 No Time For Sergeants Musical Comedy Advertising & Souvenir Theatre Programs
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(3) 1958 No Time For Sergeants Musical Comedy Advertising & Souvenir Theatre Programs
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The pictures below show larger views of the (3) 1958 No Time For Sergeants Musical Comedy Advertising & Souvenir Theatre Programs in this lot. The larger program is not dated but it is believed to be from 1958 and it has (20) pages. The smaller (2) programs are identical and they are 1958 and have (4) pages each. Both are filled with information. The larger one has pictures and the smaller Colonial Theatre Playbills have more advertising. All three of these for one price! To judge the sizes the larger program measures 8-7/8'' x 11-3/4''. The smaller programs appear to be in excellent or better condition as pictured. The larger program has some scuff marks and spotting to the cover and water spotting inside on the bottom of the first six pages.

Below here, for reference, is some additional information about No Time For Sergeants comedy:

No Time for Sergeants (1958 film)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Directed by: Mervyn LeRoy
Produced by: Mervyn LeRoy, Alex Segal
Written by: Mac Hyman (novel), Ira Levin (play)
Screenplay by: John Lee Mahin
Starring: Andy Griffith, Myron McCormick, Nick Adams, Murray Hamilton
Narrated by: Andy Griffith
Music by: Ray Heindorf
Cinematography: Harold Rosson
Edited by: William H. Ziegler
Distributed by: Warner Bros. Pictures
Release date: May 29, 1958
Running time: 119 minutes
Country: United States
Language: English
Box office: $7.2 million (est. US/ Canada rentals)

No Time for Sergeants is a 1958 American comedy film directed by Mervyn LeRoy starring Andy Griffith and featuring Myron McCormick, Don Knotts and most of the original Broadway cast. Warner Bros. contract player Nick Adams joined the cast as Stockdale's fellow military draftee Benjamin B. Whitledge, as did Murray Hamilton as Irving S. Blanchard. The film is based on a play inspired by the original novel.

Will Stockdale (Griffith) is a backward, backwoods rube from outside Callville, Georgia, who may or may not be smarter than he looks. Accused by Mr. McKinney (Dub Taylor), the head of the draft board, of being a draft dodger, Stockdale's draft notices turn out to have been hidden from him by his father, who does not want the boy to leave home and be ridiculed. His father tells Will to be careful going to big cities like Macon and Atlanta. Pa Stockdale says he has been to those cities many years before and he was ridiculed.

Wrongfully shackled by McKinney, Stockdale joins a group of new United States Air Force draftees being transported to basic training. They include the obnoxious bully Irving S. Blanchard, who having undergone ROTC training, volunteers to be in charge. (Stockdale hears that Irving had ROTC and thinks it is a disease). They report to boot camp, where Stockdale and the equally dim friend, Ben Whitledge, begin the struggle to become airmen.

Stockdale is incredibly strong and can drink any man under the table. He proceeds to make life miserable for the man in charge, Master Sergeant Orville C. King, who likes his barracks to be quiet and calm. King wears Air Crewmember wings and states, “he is 45 years old, has 18 years in the military service and 16 years as a sergeant”. In exasperation, the sergeant places the country bumpkin on full time latrine duty. Stockdale believes his new position of “P.L.O.” (permanent latrine orderly) to be a promotion.

The happy go lucky Stockdale feels that King must be “the best dang sergeant in whole dang US Air Force”. The totally unhappy Whitledge wants no part of it, lamenting that an “airman” is “like something from a funny book”. Ben wants to be assigned to the infantry, instead. A letter from his mother states, “that Ben's six brothers have all served in the infantry”. Ben tells Will, “his grandfather was a Confederate infantryman, under General Stonewall Jackson at the Battle of Chancellorsville”. Ben Whitledge says, “In the War Between the States, it was the infantry that did the fighting”, which is understandable, airplanes not having been invented yet.

King tells Will the captain desires to see the barracks and latrine spotless. A company inspection takes a surprising turn when Stockdale's immaculately clean latrine impresses King's company commander most. King gets into hot water, however, when Stockdale opens his big mouth and reveals that the sergeant kept him on bathroom duty on a permanent basis while also neglecting to have the recruit complete all the required military exams and paper work. The company commander orders King to have Stockdale through his training in one week, or else he will not only be demoted, but he also will be made “P. L. O.” himself.

Rushing him through testing, King bribes Stockdale by promising to give him his wristwatch if he can pass. Stockdale flummoxes and frustrates the various officers and men; he takes a manual dexterity test conducted by Corporal John C. Brown (Don Knotts), a psychiatric test by Maj. Royal B. Demming (James Millhollin), and an eye exam, amazingly managing to get by after driving them all crazy. Stockdale gets the wristwatch as a reward.

Ben comes to attention when a WAF captain (Jean Willes) speaks, Will is speechless. Will is informed, because of his attitude, that he should not see a woman in that case but see a superior officer only and show the proper respect. Later the same female officer is escorted into the enlisted men's mess hall by the colonel. Because he had been informed of military etiquette as to female officers by Ben, when Blanchard and King ask Will what he sees he says, “a captain”. Even though they repeat the question with a degree of encouragment to see a woman regardless of the uniform, he still insists he only sees a “captain”. Blanchard and King, not being aware of Ben's etiquette instruction, seem bewildered at his response.

Private Blanchard tells M/Sgt. King to get three passes to go to a local bar, the Purple Grotto, where King and Blanchard try to get Stockdale drunk to make him look bad and King look good. He admits he has never drunk...store bought liquor. King and Blanchard are inebriated, but Will is still sober. Stockdale says the only alcohol he previously had was what his father made with corn grain and kerosene. Blanchard buys lighter fluid from a cigarette girl. Mixing gin and bourbon with kerosene ... Will drinks it and says “it's familiar”. Then, a drunken Army infantryman walks by and a barroom brawl begins. Stockdale leaves behind a fighting Blanchard and King and returns to base; as he walks past the air police, he tells them that upstairs is the bar.

The colonel and captain later inspect the latrine and barracks. Will has mechanically rigged all the toilet seats to open simultaneously in a "salute". While Blanchard is arrested and detained by the air police, M/Sgt. King is found filthy in a torn uniform from the barroom brawl later in the latrine, and is summarily reduced to private rank, while Whitledge was blamed for King's appearance and is also placed in disgraced status. As King goes back to his office dejected, he admits to Stockdale that Blanchard and he had been trying to trick Stockdale to get him out of the way so King would not look bad, but their effort backfired. Will gives the watch back to King. King also admits he had grown to like Stockdale and became his reluctant and inadvertent mentor to success in the Air Force. Will, Ben, and Pvt. King are sent to gunnery school. Will is at the bottom of the class and Ben is next to the bottom. King graduates as the top man of the class. He is assigned to General Eugene Bush's staff and is given back his rank.

The story ends with Stockdale and Whitledge (who now has disdain for Stockdale for ruining his image in front of the captain back in the barracks) flying to Denver in an obsolete B-25 medium bomber, which took off hurriedly with some of the crew missing. Stockdale's assignment is tail gunner on the bomber. After putting the plane on autopilot, the lazy pilots fall asleep, and the airplane soon becomes lost at night over what the navigator thinks is the Gulf of Mexico. They really are flying over the atomic bomb test site at Yucca Flats, Nevada, during an A-bomb test called “Operation Prometheus”.

The radio operator of the plane was left behind at the base, so Stockdale and Whitledge must radio to obtain their real position; however, the radio is inoperable. Stockdale remembers that back home in Georgia, his father would spit into the radio and smack it to make it work. Stockdale repeats the method, and the radio works.

Military radiomen on the ground, confused by Stockdale's folksy, clownish speech, have the commander of the test, Maj. Gen. Vernon Pollard, U.S. Army Infantry, frantically rouse Maj. Gen. Eugene Bush, U.S. Air Force, from his sleep to confirm that Stockdale is not a prankster, and to give Stockdale emergency flying instructions. Bush reassures Stockdale that he is real and not a foreign agent, as King tells Bush to remind Stockdale of the watch.

Following detonation of an atom bomb near the plane over Yucca Flats, a fire breaks out in the aft of the plane. The Air Force and Army are put on full alert. Stockdale and Whitledge bail out of the plane just before it crashes, and are declared dead by the Staff Aide M/Sgt. King. The officers survive and are to be decorated. During an air medal ceremony honoring the officers and Stockdale and Whitledge as fallen heroes, they reappear, and the Air Force has to cover up that the pair is alive to avoid an international public humiliation.

Stockdale suggests both Ben (who finally forgives Stockdale for his unintentionally innocent flaws, as he thought he and Stockdale were to be executed for being deserters, inadvertently faking their deaths and for perpetrating a public fraud at the ceremony) and he be transferred to become infantrymen. Will and Ben are taken at night to a secluded area. An agreement is reached by two former West Point classmates, General Pollard, USA, and General Bush, U.S.A.F., who also heartily approve of Stockdale's last request to have M/Sgt. King transferred with them to the infantry. General Pollard has to cut an air medal from his uniform. He sits as General Bush pins the medal on Ben Whitledge. As a radio station signs off, to the “Star Spangled Banner”, all the men snap to attention, including a reluctant General Pollard.

Click on image to zoom.
(3) 1958 No Time For Sergeants Musical Comedy Advertising & Souvenir Theatre Programs (3) 1958 No Time For Sergeants Musical Comedy Advertising & Souvenir Theatre Programs


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