| Photos (see all 19 | slideshow) |
| John Wayne | ... | John Breen | |
| Vera Ralston | ... | Fleurette De Marchand | |
| Philip Dorn | ... | Col. Georges Geraud | |
| Oliver Hardy | ... | Willie Paine | |
| Marie Windsor | ... | Ann Logan | |
| John Howard | ... | Blake Randolph | |
| Hugo Haas | ... | Gen. Paul De Marchand | |
| Grant Withers | ... | George Hayden | |
| Odette Myrtil | ... | Madame De Marchand | |
| Paul Fix | ... | Beau Merritt | |
| Mae Marsh | ... | Sister Hattie | |
| Jack Pennick | ... | Capt. Dan Carroll | |
| Mickey Simpson | ... | Jacques | |
| Fred Graham | ... | Carter Ward | |
| Mabelle Koenig | ... | Marie | |
| Shy Waggner | ... | Friend | |
| Crystal White | ... | Friend | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Roy Acuff | ... | (uncredited) | |
| Fred Aldrich | ... | Townsman (uncredited) | |
| Richard Alexander | ... | Militiaman at Festival (uncredited) | |
| Dave Anderson | ... | Giles (uncredited) | |
| Charles Andre | ... | Charles - DeMarchand's Servant (uncredited) | |
| Hank Bell | ... | Militiaman at Festival (uncredited) | |
| Bob Bryant | ... | Tug-of-War Participant (uncredited) | |
| Ralph Bucko | ... | Buck - a Kentuckian (uncredited) | |
| Charles Cane | ... | Knox Brown (uncredited) | |
| Tex Cooper | ... | White-Bearded Townsman (uncredited) | |
| Gino Corrado | ... | French Soldier (uncredited) | |
| Steve Darrell | ... | General Andrew Jackson (uncredited) | |
| Ralph Dunn | ... | River Man (uncredited) | |
| Franklyn Farnum | ... | DeMarchand Party Guest (uncredited) | |
| Sumner Getchell | ... | Knox Brown - Head Fiddler (uncredited) | |
| William E. Green | ... | Bartender (uncredited) | |
| William Hawes | ... | Militiaman (uncredited) | |
| Fred Libby | ... | Militiaman (uncredited) | |
| Cliff Lyons | ... | Kentuckian Driver (uncredited) | |
| Mickey McCardle | ... | Tug-of-War Participant (uncredited) | |
| Alberto Morin | ... | Pierre Le Brun (uncredited) | |
| Al Murphy | ... | Buckskin (uncredited) | |
| Jack O'Shea | ... | Militiaman (uncredited) | |
| Jack Perry | ... | Demopolis Citizen at Festival (uncredited) | |
| Chuck Roberson | ... | Militiaman (uncredited) | |
| Michael Ross | ... | Sheriff (uncredited) | |
| David Sharpe | ... | French Soldier with Run (uncredited) | |
| Brick Sullivan | ... | Militiaman at Festival (uncredited) | |
| Glenn Thompson | ... | Tug-of-War Participant (uncredited) | |
| Tony Travers | ... | Frenchman (uncredited) | |
| Dale Van Sickel | ... | Brawler (uncredited) | |
| Blackie Whiteford | ... | Demopolis Citizen at Festival (uncredited) | |
| Bud Wolfe | ... | Militiaman at Festival (uncredited) | |
| Hank Worden | ... | Abner Todd (uncredited) | |
Directed by | |||
| George Waggner | |||
Writing credits | ||
| George Waggner | (written by) | |
Produced by | |||
| John Wayne | .... | producer (uncredited) | |
Original Music by | |||
| George Antheil | |||
Cinematography by | |||
| Lee Garmes | |||
Film Editing by | |||
| Richard L. Van Enger | |||
Art Direction by | |||
| James W. Sullivan | (as James Sullivan) | ||
Set Decoration by | |||
| John McCarthy Jr. | |||
| George Milo | |||
Costume Design by | |||
| Adele Palmer | (gowns designer) | ||
Makeup Department | |||
| Peggy Gray | .... | hair stylist | |
| Bob Mark | .... | makeup supervisor | |
| Don L. Cash | .... | makeup artist (uncredited) | |
| Cecil Holland | .... | makeup artist (uncredited) | |
| Web Overlander | .... | makeup artist (uncredited) | |
Production Management | |||
| Kenneth Holmes | .... | production manager (uncredited) | |
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director | |||
| Lee Lukather | .... | assistant director (uncredited) | |
| Robert E. Morrison | .... | assistant director (uncredited) | |
Sound Department | |||
| Dick Tyler Sr. | .... | sound (as Dick Tyler) | |
| Howard Wilson | .... | sound | |
Special Effects by | |||
| Howard Lydecker | .... | special effects | |
| Theodore Lydecker | .... | special effects | |
Stunts | |||
| Jerry Brown | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Bob Bryant | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Roydon Clark | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Fred Graham | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Chuck Hayward | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| John Hudkins | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Cliff Lyons | .... | stunt coordinator (uncredited) | |
| Cliff Lyons | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Bob Morgan | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Chuck Roberson | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| David Sharpe | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Henry Wills | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Bud Wolfe | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
Camera and Electrical Department | |||
| Ben Bishop | .... | grip (uncredited) | |
| Vic Jones | .... | gaffer (uncredited) | |
| Donald Biddle Keyes | .... | still photographer (uncredited) | |
| Harry Webb | .... | camera operator (uncredited) | |
Music Department | |||
| R. Dale Butts | .... | orchestrator | |
| Virginia Rees | .... | singing voice: Marie Windsor (uncredited) | |
Other crew | |||
| D.R.O. Hatswell | .... | uniforms (as D.R. Overall Hatswell) | |
| Sid Davis | .... | stand-in: John Wayne (uncredited) | |
| Dorothy Yutzi | .... | script supervisor (uncredited) | |
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| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
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I would be hard pressed to find an odder casting of co-stars in a movie than John Wayne and Oliver Hardy, but the arrangement seems to work in "The Fighting Kentuckian". Both are members of the 2nd Kentucky Regiment, making their way home following the Battle of New Orleans; it's 1819 and the setting is Demopolis, Alabama. They manage to muster out of their assignments, as John Breen (Wayne) catches the eye of the pretty Fleurette De Marchand (Vera Ralston), and Willie Paine (Hardy) is given a pass to keep tabs on his buddy Breen.
The movie follows the story of a band of exiled French soldiers who were loyal to Napoleon. Following his defeat at Waterloo and exile to Elba, many of his followers found safety in the new land, settling in the southern United States. Curiously, the French soldiers maintain full military dress as they attempt to assimilate into their new surroundings, but at least it makes it easier to tell the good guys from the bad guys. Kentuckian Breen allies himself with the French when he discovers that the village boundaries they have settled were switched at the bequest of George Hayden (Grant Withers), who now plans to steal the land back for himself with the help of his river men allies. Standing between Breen and Madame Fleurette is her fiancée by arrangement, Blake Randolph (John Howard). Randolph has done much to insure the success of the French settlement, and has the backing of Fleurette's father, General Paul De Marchand (Hugo Haas). Needless to say, Breen has an uphill fight, and is constantly in mental discussion with himself as to what his battle plan should be.
In the course of action, Breen and Paine find themselves a helpful ally in French Colonel Georges Geraud (Philip Dorn). Watch closely, and you'll observe Oliver Hardy's character make three moves at once in a chess game against Geraud, proudly proclaiming to "crown it" as he manages to make it to the far side of the game board. Ever the vigilant sidekick, Paine rides after his Kentucky regiment when Breen is taken into custody by the scheming Hayden, now with a two day head start away from Demopolis. Needless to say, they arrive in time to settle the score with Hayden's river men and assure victory for the French settlers.
I have to admit, I was constantly in anticipation of Stan Laurel walking out from behind some tree or boulder to cameo in support of his comic partner. For his part, Oliver Hardy affects many of the familiar comic mannerisms of the partnership he became famous for, and though for the most part appropriate for the situation, they seemed out of place without Laurel on the receiving end.
As expected, John Wayne manages to win the hand of Madame Fleurette by film's end. That custom was established as far back as his mid 1930's Lone Star Film period, but in those days he didn't have to do much to get the girl. As "The Fighting Kentuckian", he had to try hard, real hard to win his lady.