Robert Montgomery took top billing for the first time in Shipmates (1931). It was his fourteenth picture for MGM in just three years. He had been signed by the studio in 1929 under a contract that paid him $350 a week and his star status in Shipmates raised his salary to $2100 a week. But the promotion did little to change the opinions of MGM's Louis B. Mayer and Irving Thalberg that Montgomery was a "general-utility player." His roles thus far (The Big House (1930) being a notable exception) had cast him as a rather generic, fun-loving playboy. Shipmates would be no different. As The New York Times said of the film, "in this, the pictures which elevates [Montgomery], as the saying goes, to stardom, he is still a friendly, personable young man of no particular distinction."

In Shipmates, Montgomery plays John Paul 'Jonesy' Jones, a sailor who masquerades as an oil man to impress the ladies. But the gig is up when Jonesy falls for his Admiral's daughter. Adding to Jonesy's woes are two shipmates out to get him - there's the chief petty officer who uses him as a whipping boy and a rather irritated former boyfriend of the girl he loves. After some heroics, Jonesy, of course, proves himself worthy in the end - joining the Naval Academy and winning the girl. Shipmates was based on the short story Maskee by Ernest Paynter, first published in American Magazine in 1926. The Navy man was a role Montgomery would later play in real life - he would serve as a lieutenant in the U.S. Naval Reserve during WWII.

Joining Montgomery in Shipmates is character actor Hobart Bosworth as Admiral Corbin. Bosworth is often referred to as the "Dean of Hollywood" for his pioneering of the California film industry. Bosworth rose to fame on the Broadway stage in the early 1900s. His most notable roles were leads in Marta of the Lowlands and in Ibsen's Hedda Gabler. But Bosworth's stage career was cut short when tuberculosis struck. He was forced to leave New York for a warmer climate. He settled in San Diego and in 1908, was signed by the Selig Polyscope Co. to make films. Bosworth is generally credited with starring in the first movie shot on the West Coast - In the Sultan's Power (1909). And he would be influential in moving the Selig company to Los Angeles. Bosworth would write, direct, produce and star in countless films for Selig before forming his own company in 1913.

Bosworth's roles were often limited to small parts in A-pictures or character roles in B-films and serials. But he was, despite a damaged voice from the TB, able to make the transition to sound pictures. And he credited the work with restoring his heath. As Bosworth put it, "I believe, after all, that it is the motion pictures that have saved my life." It is estimated that Bosworth acted in more than 250 films between 1908 and 1942.

Another familiar face in Shipmates is Dorothy Jordan as Montgomery's love interest. Jordan had appeared opposite Hollywood heavyweights Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks in The Taming of the Shrew (1929), not to mention Marie Dressler and Wallace Beery in Min and Bill (1930). She married producer Merian C. Cooper in 1933, the same year his hit King Kong was released. Jordan virtually retired from movies after her marriage. She had been slated to appear in Flying Down to Rio (1933) - instead the film featured Ginger Rogers in her first pairing with Fred Astaire. Jordan did make a brief return to Hollywood in the 1950s in three John Ford films: The Sun Shines Bright (1953), The Searchers (1956) and The Wings of Eagles (1957).

Also be on the lookout for future gossip maven Hedda Hopper - she plays the role of Auntie in Shipmates.

Producer: Harry Pollard
Director: Harry Pollard
Screenplay: Ernest Paynter, Louis Edelman, Delmer Daves
Cinematography: Clyde De Vinna
Film Editing: William LeVanway
Art Direction: Cedric Gibbons
Music: General Daniel Butterfield, Charles A. Zimmerman
Cast: Robert Montgomery (John Paul Jones), Ernest Torrence (Chief McTavish), Dorothy Jordan (Kit Corbin), Hobart Bosworth (Adm. Ben Corbin), Cliff Edwards (Bilge Bryan), Gavin Gordon (Lt. Mike Watson).
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by Stephanie Thames