This Is the Army
This Is the Army is a musical revue created by Irving Berlin in 1942 as a morale-boosting production performed exclusively by active-duty U.S. Army soldiers to entertain civilian and military audiences while raising funds for the Army Emergency Relief during World War II.[1] Approved by General George C. Marshall and inspired by Berlin's World War I soldier show Yip! Yip! Yaphank, the revue featured an original score completed in one month, including the title song "This Is the Army, Mr. Jones" and the revived "Oh! How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning."[1] It premiered on Broadway at the Broadway Theatre in New York City on July 4, 1942, with an initial cast of 359 soldiers under director Ezra Stone, before embarking on a national tour from October 1942 to February 1943 and a subsequent world tour from October 1943 to October 1945, performing in theaters across the U.S., England, North Africa, Italy, the Pacific, and other war zones for troops and dignitaries including Winston Churchill.[1] The stage production raised approximately $5 million for Army relief efforts, marking it as one of the most successful wartime fundraisers, while its integrated cast—unusual in the segregated U.S. military—highlighted early efforts toward racial inclusion alongside traditional elements like soldier-performed drag routines.[1][2] A film adaptation, produced by Warner Bros. for $1.4 million and directed by Michael Curtiz, was released in 1943 starring Lieutenant Ronald Reagan, Sergeant Joe Louis, and other military personnel, with all profits—totaling over $9.5 million—donated to the same relief fund, further amplifying the revue's patriotic impact.[2]Origins and Development
Irving Berlin's World War I Predecessor
Irving Berlin, drafted into the U.S. Army in July 1917, was assigned to Camp Upton on Long Island, New York, where he served as a private and later sergeant in the 152nd Depot Brigade.[3] [4] While stationed there, Berlin composed and produced Yip! Yip! Yaphank!, a musical revue featuring an all-soldier cast drawn exclusively from Camp Upton personnel, which premiered on August 19, 1918, at the Century Theatre in New York City.[5] [6] The production, subtitled A Military "Mess" Cooked Up by the Boys of Camp Upton, incorporated over 300 servicemen in roles blending vaudeville-style entertainment with military themes, including acrobatics, juggling, comedy sketches, choral numbers, and choreographed drills set to Berlin's original music.[7] [3] Standout songs like "Oh! How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning," in which Berlin portrayed a reluctant soldier roused by reveille, captured the everyday gripes of army life and became a hit, performed by the composer himself during the show.[6] [4] Performances raised funds for soldier welfare, including construction of a camp community center, establishing a model of patriotic, soldier-performed revues that boosted morale and supported relief efforts.[6] This format of integrating humor, music, and discipline directly influenced Berlin's later World War II production, This Is the Army.[3]World War II Stage Revue Creation
Following the United States' entry into World War II after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, Irving Berlin began reactivating elements of his 1918 revue Yip Yip Yaphank to create a new production tailored to the current conflict.[1] In February 1942, Berlin devoted his full efforts to scripting and composing for the updated show, which he titled This Is the Army, drawing on his prior experience staging soldier-performed musicals during World War I.[8] The revue incorporated revived sketches and songs from Yip Yip Yaphank, such as "Oh! How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning," alongside newly written numbers to reflect contemporary military life and morale needs.[1] Berlin collaborated closely with U.S. Army officials to ensure authenticity, structuring the production under Army auspices with all proceeds directed to the Army Emergency Relief fund.[9] This involved recruiting active-duty soldiers for the cast, selected from various units to represent diverse American servicemen, while emphasizing discipline and realism in staging without professional actors dominating roles.[1] Key new compositions included "This Is the Army, Mr. Jones," a marching anthem highlighting unit cohesion and readiness, composed to rally enlistees and evoke the volunteer spirit amid rapid mobilization.[1] The revue premiered on July 4, 1942, at the Broadway Theatre in New York City, coinciding with Independence Day to amplify patriotic resonance.[9] [1] It ran for 113 performances through September 26, 1942, before preparations for national deployment, establishing the format's viability through disciplined rehearsals that mirrored basic training.[9] This initial run validated Berlin's approach of blending humor, music, and soldier testimonials to foster unity without overt propaganda.[10]Fundraising and Morale-Boosting Purpose
"This Is the Army" was produced explicitly to generate funds for Army Emergency Relief (AER), the U.S. Army's official nonprofit welfare organization established to assist soldiers and their families with emergency financial needs. All net proceeds from both the stage revue and its subsequent film adaptation were donated directly to AER, with Irving Berlin waiving royalties on his compositions to maximize contributions.[11][1] By the conclusion of World War II, the production had raised approximately $10 million for the fund, equivalent to over $150 million in 2023 dollars when adjusted for inflation, supporting aid for thousands of service members facing hardships such as medical bills and family support during wartime deployments.[11][12] In parallel, the revue served as a morale-boosting initiative by delivering patriotic entertainment that depicted the realities of military service through accessible humor and music, performed by active-duty soldiers for both troops and civilians. This approach aimed to sustain national resolve by humanizing the soldier's experience and emphasizing collective sacrifice amid prolonged conflict, with performances touring theaters, camps, and battlefronts to combat war weariness.[1][13] The inclusion of performers from diverse ethnic backgrounds, including Black soldiers in an otherwise segregated military, underscored unity in diversity as a core American strength, with the troupe functioning as one of the few integrated units in the Army despite prevailing policies mandating separation by race.[1][13] This structure reinforced a shared national purpose, portraying service across lines of race and origin as essential to victory, without altering the era's institutional segregation.[1]Stage Production
Performances and Tours
The stage production premiered on July 4, 1942, at the Broadway Theatre in New York City, running for 113 performances before launching a national tour across U.S. theaters and military installations.[14] This domestic phase targeted both civilian audiences and stationed troops, emphasizing patriotic themes to sustain wartime resolve, with performances structured for rapid staging at bases to minimize logistical disruptions.[1] The tour concluded on February 13, 1943, in San Francisco, generating approximately $2 million in proceeds for Army Emergency Relief through ticket sales and related fundraising.[15] In October 1943, a contingent of about 165 soldier-performers, dispatched under General Dwight D. Eisenhower's auspices, initiated overseas tours to entertain U.S. and Allied forces in the European, North African, Middle Eastern, and Pacific theaters.[16] [17] Adaptations for frontline conditions included simplified setups on makeshift stages amid active combat zones, such as post-Blitz London venues and Italian bases following Allied advances into Rome.[18] [19] Pacific performances utilized portable infrastructure later repurposed for other troop shows on remote islands.[14] These tours collectively reached over one million spectators, with empirical records indicating sustained high attendance that correlated with reported improvements in soldier morale and unit cohesion, as the all-soldier cast's familiarity fostered direct identification and emotional uplift.[1] [13] The international leg persisted into 1945, prioritizing proximity to deployment areas to counter isolation and fatigue effects documented in military psychological assessments.[20]All-Soldier Cast and Logistics
The all-soldier cast of This Is the Army was assembled exclusively from enlisted personnel, with no professional actors involved except Irving Berlin himself, prioritizing raw authenticity derived from genuine military experience over theatrical polish. Recruitment began in spring 1942 at Camp Upton, New York, where Berlin and stage director Ezra Stone personally selected performers from across U.S. Army units, initially favoring those with prior entertainment skills such as musicians or amateur performers while ensuring all maintained active soldier status and underwent rigorous military training. The original Broadway and national touring company numbered 359 soldiers drawn from diverse ranks and backgrounds, including an unprecedented integration of Black and white performers in a segregated military, reflecting a deliberate emphasis on shared wartime burdens among ordinary troops rather than elite talent.[1] Military discipline was enforced alongside rehearsals, with cast members participating in daily drills, formations, and synchronized marches to preserve operational readiness and embody the revue's theme of soldiers entertaining soldiers. This model extended democratic participation, as selections avoided favoritism toward officers or specialists, instead incorporating privates, technicians, and support personnel who represented the broad cross-section of Army demographics, fostering a sense of collective contribution amid the war effort. The approach underscored causal realism in production: performers' dual roles as combatants and entertainers ensured content resonated with frontline realities, unfiltered by civilian perspectives.[1] Logistics were orchestrated by the Army Special Services Division, which managed the formation of specialized detachments like Detachment 0665-A to handle global deployments despite wartime constraints on fuel, shipping, and materials. The national tour, concluding on February 13, 1943, involved transporting the full 359-man unit across the U.S. via rail and road amid rationing, generating over $2 million for Army Emergency Relief before transitioning to overseas operations. For the foreign tour commencing October 21, 1943, the cast was streamlined to 150 soldiers to facilitate mobility, performing in theaters, camps, and forward areas across England, North Africa, Italy, and the Pacific theaters, often under blackout conditions or improvised setups.[1][16] Transportation posed acute challenges, including perilous Atlantic crossings on U-boat-threatened convoys aboard overcrowded vessels like the Monarch of Bermuda and El Libertador, where limited fresh water, food shortages, and anti-submarine evasions tested unit cohesion. Special Services coordinated with theater commands—such as under General Dwight D. Eisenhower for European legs—to prioritize show shipments over non-essential cargo, yet delays from enemy action and port bottlenecks frequently disrupted schedules, requiring on-site adaptations like local sourcing of props and costumes from battlefield scraps. These feats highlighted the production's resilience, as units rotated personnel to sustain performances through 1945, balancing entertainment with combat rotations to minimize disruptions to frontline duties.[1]Key Musical Contributions
Irving Berlin composed the full score for the This Is the Army stage revue in one month, finalizing it by April 1942 to capture the immediacy of World War II soldier experiences.[1] These new compositions extended themes from his World War I revue Yip, Yip Yaphank, incorporating updated lyrics and numbers that reflected continuity in military life while addressing contemporary enlistment, training, and combat demands.[21] [1] Central to the score were songs like "This Is the Army, Mr. Jones," which directly confronted the abrupt shift to service for inductees, emphasizing duty amid personal disruption.[1] Tracks such as "Dressed Up to Kill"—later adapted to "Dressed Up to Win"—evoked resilience in combat preparation, portraying soldiers' determination through vivid, unvarnished depictions of readiness and hardship.[1] By integrating relatable elements of training routines and emotional strains like fatigue and separation, the music reinforced causal links between shared adversity and collective fortitude, avoiding sanitized narratives.[21] [1] The contributions sustained soldier morale by grounding patriotism in empirical realities of service, with numbers echoing the exhaustion of drills and longing for home to foster empathy and perseverance.[1] Evidence of their standalone influence includes troops independently adopting songs such as "Oh! How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning" as informal anthems during 1942–1945, amplifying resilience beyond stage contexts.[21] This organic dissemination underscored the score's effectiveness in embedding themes of endurance into everyday military culture.[1]Film Adaptation
Warner Bros. Acquisition and Production
In July 1942, Warner Bros. acquired the film rights to This Is the Army from Irving Berlin for $250,000, a sum Berlin immediately donated to the Army Emergency Relief fund.[13][22] This transaction formalized a partnership between the studio and the U.S. Army, with Warner Bros. agreeing to direct all net profits from the film to Army Emergency Relief, mirroring the stage production's fundraising model and ensuring military oversight in aspects like casting to maintain the revue's soldier-centric authenticity.[23] Production commenced in early 1943 with a budget of $1.87 million, overseen by producer Hal B. Wallis, who coordinated with Army officials to incorporate active-duty soldiers into key performance segments while adhering to wartime resource constraints.[24] Filming wrapped after three months in May 1943, allowing for expedited post-production ahead of the film's premiere.[23] The Army's involvement extended to requisitioning personnel, such as recalling soldiers from training for roles, to preserve the production's morale-boosting ethos without compromising military duties. Unlike the all-soldier stage revue, the film adaptation integrated civilian performers in framing roles to establish narrative continuity around the revue sequences, a structural choice necessitated by cinematic demands for plot cohesion and star appeal, while still featuring hundreds of uniformed troops in musical numbers to uphold the original's authenticity.[25] This hybrid approach balanced entertainment value with the Army's insistence on realistic depiction of service life, avoiding full reliance on non-military actors that might dilute the wartime propaganda intent.[13]Direction by Michael Curtiz
Michael Curtiz, born Manó Kaminer in Budapest in 1886 and a naturalized U.S. citizen since immigrating to Hollywood in 1926, directed the film adaptation of This Is the Army after helming Warner Bros.' Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942), a musical biography, and aviation war drama Captains of the Clouds (1942), which prepared him to fuse revue-style soldier sketches with a framing narrative prioritizing unvarnished military vigor over studio artifice.[26][23] His approach preserved the stage production's chaotic, all-amateur essence, using minimal narrative connective tissue—such as intergenerational soldier tales—to showcase authentic troop morale without diluting the revue's propagandistic core.[13] Curtiz's direction emphasized the performers' raw, enlistee-driven energy, drawing from his experience with large-scale ensembles to highlight the cast's military discipline as a counterpoint to typical Hollywood gloss, thereby reinforcing the film's aim to depict service as a collective duty rather than individualized heroism.[1] This stemmed partly from his émigré vantage, having fled post-World War I European instability for America's opportunities, which lent a grounded realism to wartime motifs of freedom and sacrifice across his output, including this all-soldier showcase.[26] Coordinating over 300 uniformed extras—transported en masse from the stage cast under Army oversight—posed acute logistical hurdles amid rationed resources, yet Curtiz managed by channeling directives through assistant directors to non-commissioned officers, maintaining martial hierarchy on set to ensure synchronized drills and numbers.[23][13] Principal photography wrapped in under four months despite these constraints and Berlin's on-site script tweaks, enabling a July 1943 premiere that amplified the original revue's fundraising reach.[1]Technical Aspects and Filming Challenges
The film employed the three-strip Technicolor process, capturing the elaborate musical numbers and revue sequences in saturated hues that enhanced their spectacle, a choice made despite the process's demands for multiple synchronized cameras, intense arc lighting, and extended exposure times that complicated wartime production.[27] This full-color system, which separated red, green, and blue exposures onto individual strips for later printing, was reserved for high-priority projects amid resource constraints, marking a rarity for 1943 releases where black-and-white prevailed to conserve materials.[13] Principal photography, spanning late 1942 to early 1943, centered at Warner Bros.' Burbank studios, including Stage 27A, with supplementary exteriors at military installations like Camp Shelby, Mississippi, to replicate authentic troop environments without compromising security.[28] Coordinating an ensemble exceeding 300 active-duty soldiers proved logistically arduous, as abrupt transfers to combat zones or training disrupted rehearsals and dailies, forcing director Michael Curtiz to adopt accelerated schedules, backup performers from nearby units, and on-set military oversight to ensure compliance with Army protocols.[23] These constraints yielded a final runtime of 121 minutes, achieved through efficient editing that prioritized kinetic revue segments over extraneous narrative, while adhering to historical fidelity in uniforms, choreography, and props sourced directly from Army depots.[29] The production's efficiency, completed under seven months amid national mobilization, underscored adaptations like simplified set builds and minimal retakes to minimize dye and film stock usage, critical given wartime rationing of Technicolor's proprietary imbibition printing.[27]Narrative and Content
Plot Overview
The film opens during World War I, where song-and-dance man Jerry Jones, drafted into the U.S. Army, organizes an all-soldier revue titled Yip, Yip, Yaphank to boost troop morale on Broadway, featuring Irving Berlin's compositions.[30][31] Wounded in combat shortly after the production's premiere on August 19, 1918, Jerry returns home, marries, and transitions to civilian life as a theatrical producer, forgoing further stage pursuits.[30][32] Twenty-five years later, amid World War II's outbreak in Europe and following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, Jerry's son Johnny enlists in the Army, mirroring his father's path and embodying intergenerational military service.[23][30] Ordered to assemble a comparable all-soldier revue called This Is the Army, Johnny initially resists but ultimately stages the show as wartime entertainment for troops, emphasizing camaraderie and resilience over personal drama or profound character exploration.[30][31] The narrative serves primarily as a loose framework to showcase musical performances depicting soldiers' transitions from civilian routines to military duties, underscoring duty and unity without delving into heavy conflict or sentimentality.[32][23]Cast and Principal Roles
The film This Is the Army featured a mix of established Hollywood performers in lead roles and ensembles of active-duty U.S. Army soldiers in the revue sequences, reflecting the production's wartime ethos of integrating civilian stars with military talent to boost morale.[23][33] This blend distinguished the cast from typical musicals, as soldier participants were drawn directly from service members trained in performance for the original stage show, with many appearing uncredited in group numbers.[13] Principal roles included:| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| George Murphy | Jerry Jones, a World War I veteran and show producer |
| Ronald Reagan | Johnny Jones, Jerry's son and lead in the World War II show |
| Joan Leslie | Eileen Dibble, Johnny's romantic interest |
| George Tobias | Maxie Twardofsky, a comedic soldier sidekick |
| Alan Hale | Sergeant McGee, a drill instructor |
| Charles Butterworth | Eddie Dibble, Eileen's father |
Musical Numbers and Performances
The revue This Is the Army consisted of musical numbers written by Irving Berlin, staged by an all-soldier cast in military uniforms to evoke authenticity and camaraderie among troops. Performances emphasized high-energy ensemble singing and dancing, reflecting military drill precision adapted for entertainment. Numbers drew from Berlin's catalog, including revivals from his World War I show Yip Yip Yaphank, integrated with new compositions to boost morale during World War II mobilization.[1] Central to the production was the title song "This Is the Army, Mr. Jones," performed by the full chorus in formation, with lyrics addressing civilian misconceptions about army life through humorous, rhythmic verses. The routine featured synchronized marching and call-and-response elements, performed across tours to symbolize unified service.[24][1] Irving Berlin personally performed "Oh! How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning," a 1918 composition from his earlier soldier show, accompanying himself on piano while clad in soldier fatigues for verisimilitude. This solo spotlighted Berlin's self-deprecating humor about reveille, reprised nightly to connect wartime efforts across generations.[1][35] Staging incorporated period-specific tropes, including a drag routine in "Ladies of the Chorus," where male soldiers donned feminine attire and makeup to parody celebrity impersonations, such as Ethel Barrymore, as lighthearted diversion in barracks tradition. Similarly, white soldiers executed a blackface rendition of "Puttin' On the Ritz," a 1929 standard adapted with minstrel-style steps, before transitioning to non-minstrel roles; separately, black soldiers performed a tailored version without blackface, highlighting integrated yet segregated unit dynamics.[36] Other prominent numbers included:- "I Left My Heart at the Stage Door Canteen," a sentimental ballad about romance amid deployment, sung by soloists with orchestral backing.
- "Poor Little Me, I'm on K.P.," a comedic gripe about kitchen police duty, featuring ensemble antics to lampoon daily drudgery.
- "My Sergeant and I," a duet extolling non-commissioned officer bonds, staged with drill movements.[37][38]