Sailor Beware!
Comedy · TV Movie
Overview
BBC television adaptation of the Philip King and Falkland L. Cary play about an imminent wedding becoming endangered by a domineering matriarch.
Top Cast
Jean Burgess
Jean Burgess
Daphne Pink
Jean Burgess
Daphne Pink


James Copeland
James Copeland
Carnoustie Bligh, AB
James Copeland
Carnoustie Bligh, AB
Sheila Shand Gibbs
Sheila Shand Gibbs
Shirley Hornett
Sheila Shand Gibbs
Shirley Hornett


Ronald Lewis
Ronald Lewis
Albert Tufnell AB
Ronald Lewis
Albert Tufnell AB


Myrette Morven
Myrette Morven
Mrs. Lack
Myrette Morven
Mrs. Lack


Peggy Mount
Peggy Mount
Emma Hornett
Peggy Mount
Emma Hornett


Cyril Smith
Cyril Smith
Henry Hornett
Cyril Smith
Henry Hornett
Ann Wilton
Ann Wilton
Edie Hornett
Ann Wilton
Edie Hornett
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Sailor Spike dates girls whose names he finds in an address book. Each girl has the same tatoo, placed there by another sailor Bill. When Spike meets Bill they become friends. In Calais Spike meets Goldie. Bill warns him against her, but Spike ignores the warning until he finds Bill's tatoo on Goldie as well.

On shore leave, a young sailor meets and falls in love with a pretty young blonde. He goes home with her to meet her parents, but they don't approve of him at all. Their daughter takes offense at this, and in the ensuing argument she storms out of the house determined to live on her own.

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Meeting in a navy recruiting line, Al Crowthers and Melvin Jones become friends. Al has tried to enlist before, but was always rejected. He keeps trying so that he can impress women. Melvin, is allergic to women's cosmetics and his doctor prescribed ocean travel, so he decided to join the navy.

This festive comedy has a theme song that was incredibly popular in its day – but which is missing a verse! The penultimate verse ends as follows: "...there were 39 sailors and one girl, and that's why the censors deleted the last verse." In 1965, it was new and very daring for a girl to go to sea in the merchant navy. But fortunately, Peer Guldbrandsen and director Annelise Reenberg saw that girls also had a future at sea when they wrote the film's screenplay based on Else Boyes' best-selling novel. The moral frown is replaced by a big smile when the pretty radio operator, Else, boards the M/S Warrigal, owned by the magnificent shipowner, Wilhelmine Jacobsen. The trip from Brønshøj to Bangkok – and back – becomes as festive as an archetypal Danish male society can manage when a pretty girl destroys their age-old traditions.












