6.9/10
147
10 user 2 critic

Swing Out, Sweet Land (1970)

John Wayne and an all-star cast tell the story of America.

Director:

Stan Harris

Writers:

Paul Keyes (as Paul W. Keyes), John Aylesworth (Writer)
Reviews
Won 1 Primetime Emmy. Another 1 nomination. See more awards »

Photos

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Cast

Cast overview, first billed only:
John Wayne ... Self
Ann-Margret ... Entertainer at Valley Forge
Lucille Ball ... Statue of Liberty (voice)
Jack Benny ... Man Who Finds Silver Dollar
Dan Blocker ... Indian Who Sells Manhattan
Roscoe Lee Browne ... Frederick Douglass
Glen Campbell ... Self
Johnny Cash ... Self
Roy Clark ... Banjo Player at Andrew Jackson's Inaugural
Bing Crosby ... Mark Twain
Phyllis Diller ... Belva A. Lockwood
Lorne Greene ... George Washington
Celeste Holm ... Nancy Lincoln
Bob Hope ... Self - Entertaining Troops at Valley Forge
Michael Landon ... Peter Minuit
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Storyline

John Wayne and an all-star cast tell the story of America.

Plot Summary | Add Synopsis


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Did You Know?

Trivia

At least two of the stars are from Canada: Lorne Greene and William Shatner. See more »

Connections

Referenced in All in the Family: Writing the President (1971) See more »

Soundtracks

It Was Good Enough For Grandma
Written by Harold Arlen & E.Y. Harburg
Performed by Ann-Margret
See more »

User Reviews

 
A curio of its day (and of its participants) as much as anything else
29 June 2003 | by AldanoliSee all my reviews

Even those who aren't fans of John Wayne would probably still enjoy this series of vignettes that Wayne narrates almost like the Stage Manager in "Our Town," stepping from era to era through a few centuries of American history. Wayne had been burned in his earliest foray into television nearly two decades earlier: Making a guest appearance on a variety show in 1953 while his movie "Hondo" was in theatres, he was supposed to act like he didn't know why the audience was reacting, and then every time he turned around he'd press a button in his pants and a sign on his back would light up to say "Hondo." The indignity of the appearance embarrassed him enough so that, except for rare guest appearances on shows like "I Love Lucy," Wayne avoided television for most of the next 20 years. "Swing Out, Sweet Land" gave him a chance to show his unabashed red-white-and-blue sentiments and to feel far more comfortable in front of the television cameras.

Still, although it's an enjoyable and a somewhat tongue-in-cheek television special, sticking to many of the clichés of the American history genre, it's also very much a curio of its era -- when you could spend a couple of hours recounting those clichés as history, and also present them by featuring a raft of then-current celebrities often doing their own shtick as a counterpoint to the history -- Jack Benny (of course!) finding the silver dollar that Washington threw across the Delaware; Roy Clark as a banjo player at Andy Jackson's funeral; even Rowan and Martin as the Wright Brothers! You won't find the kind of insight that Ken Burns puts forth on his PBS series, certainly . . . and, as history, perhaps its most poignant feature is realizing just how many of the folks who were well-known at that time (like Wayne himself, Benny, Lucille Ball, Bing Crosby, Lorne Greene, Michael Landon, Greg Morris, and even Ricky Nelson) are themselves already gone.


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Details

Country:

USA

Language:

English

Release Date:

29 November 1970 (USA) See more »

Also Known As:

John Wayne's Tribute to America See more »

Company Credits

Show more on IMDbPro »

Technical Specs

Runtime:

Sound Mix:

Mono

Color:

Color

Aspect Ratio:

1.33 : 1
See full technical specs »

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