The Sun Shines Bright
JUDGE BILLY PRIEST...the only man who ever called Mallie Crump a Lady
With the election approaching, a judge in a Southern town at the turn of the 20th century is involved variously in revealing the real identity of a young woman, reliving his Civil War memories, and preventing the lynching of an African youth.
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Cast

Charles Winninger
William Pittman Priest

Arleen Whelan
Lucy Lee Lake

John Russell
Ashby Corwin

Stepin Fetchit
Jeff Poindexter

Russell Simpson
Lewt Lake

Ludwig Stössel
Herman Felsburg

Francis Ford
Feeney

Paul Hurst
Jimmy Bagby

Mitchell Lewis
Andy Redcliffe

Grant Withers
Buck Ramsey

Milburn Stone
Horace K. Maydew

Dorothy Jordan
Lucy Lee's Mother

Elzie Emanuel
U.S. Grant 'You Ess' Woodford

Henry O'Neill
Joe D. Habersham

Slim Pickens
Sterling

James Kirkwood
General Fairfield

Ernest Whitman
Pleasant 'Uncle Plez' Woodford

Trevor Bardette
Rufe Ramseur

Eve March
Mallie Cramp

Hal Baylor
Rufe Ramseur Jr.
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
"Priest" (Charles Winninger) is a Kentucky judge who is coming up for re-election and it's going to be a tough challenge. The town is divided roughly along the lines of an old Civil war mentality, congenially enough amongst the white folks but still consigning the black population to their traditional societal sub-strata. The judge's chances of winning become distinctly precarious when he intervenes in one case where a lawless bunch are apt to lynch a young man for an alleged crime against a white girl. Their evidence seems predicated solely on the racket caused by their bloodhounds and this is a man of principal who requires the rule of law to be upheld. His beliefs cause him yet further problems as a tragedy befalls the community that causes him, yet again, to take a stance that isn't going to win him many supporters either. Along the way, we delve a little into the history of the townsfolk during the war and the whole thing is underpinned with a geniality that Winninger delivers well. It emphasises the value of community, but only when community values and enforces it's own standards. Shame and, to a degree, contrition, are used quite successfully here to illustrate those points - but it's all presented in a light-hearted fashion. Can he win the vote, though?
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