Billie (1965)

Billie (1965)

Taglines: Billie’s Got the Beat!

Billie movie storyline. 15 year old tomboy Billie Carol, the younger of two daughters of Harding mayoral candidate Howard G. Carol and his wife Agnes Carol, is naturally athletic. She attributes her speed to being able to hear what she calls “the beat”: music she hears in her head, speeding up that music which makes her go faster in whatever activity.

She catches the eye of her high school’s track and field coach, the school which only has a boys’ track and field team which she is asked to join. Her father encourages her to do so despite he having recently made a campaign speech to a group of young women on his stance that women should not compete with men. This dichotomy causes a problem in his campaign.

Another potential problem in the campaign is some unknown information about his older daughter, twenty year old Jean, who is home from school and who he still sees as his little girl. Billie, on the other hand, is often viewed by Howard as the son he never had, which often causes problems in his relationship with her. But Billie has other problems, especially in her relationship with Mike Benson, a student new to school and an aspiring decathlete. Mike and Billie like each other in a boy/girl sense – her first case of young love – but does not know how to reconcile that feeling with Mike wanting her to be a girl first and a track star second.

Billie is a 1965 American musical film directed by Don Weis. Based on the 1952 play Time Out For Ginger by Ronald Alexander (playwright), the film stars Patty Duke in the title role. Other starring are Jim Backus, Jane Greer, Warren Berlinger, Susan Seaforth, Charles Lane, Dick Sargent, Bobby Diamond, Donna McKechnie, Michael Fox and Richard Deacon.

Billie Movie Poster (1965)

Billie (1965)

Directed by: Don Weis
Starring: Patty Duke, Jim Backus, Jane Greer, Warren Berlinger, Susan Seaforth, Charles Lane, Dick Sargent, Bobby Diamond, Donna McKechnie, Michael Fox, Richard Deacon
Screenplay by: Ronald Alexander
Cinematography by: John L. Russell
Film Editing by: Adrienne Fazan
Set Decoration by: Sam Comer, James W. Payne
Art Direction by: Arthur Lonergan, Hal Pereira
Music by: Dominic Frontiere
MPAA Rating: None.
Distributed by: United Artists
Release Date: September 1, 1965

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