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  1. Never Wave at a WAC. (1953) The grandmother of Private Benjamin, but without most of the fun. All through the ‘50s and into the ‘60s the WWII generation, of whom most of the males had served in the armed forces, were gaga for “service comedies.”. These films made the Army and the Navy seem like fun places to be.

  2. Never Wave at a WAC is a 1953 American comedy film directed by Norman Z. McLeod, and starring Rosalind Russell, Paul Douglas and Marie Wilson.

  3. Who doesn't love having an occasional tossed into your viewing mix. Never Wave at a WAC is a classic example of a 1950's farce. Jo McBain, Rosalind Russell, has just learned that her fiance army Lt. Colonel Sky, William Ching, is being transferred to Paris. Jo is desperate to keep Sky close within her physical grasp for fear of losing him. Her father senator McBain, Charles Dingle, hearing her ...

  4. Norman Z. McLeod. Director. Ken Englund. Writer. A divorced socialite decides to join the Army because she hopes it will enable her to see more of her boyfriend, a Colonel. She soon encounters many difficulties with the Army lifestyle. Moreover, her ex-husband is working as a consultant with the Army, and he uses his position to disrupt her ...

  5. Jo McBain, a divorced socialite and daughter of Senator Tom Roberts, asks her father to get her an officer's commission in the WACs, so she can be in Paris with her boy friend, Lt. Colonel 'Sky" Fairchild. But her father decides the WAC training won't hurt her and she ends up in Fort Lee, Virginia, along with an ex-burlesque queen, '"Danger ...

  6. 25. Juni 2013 · Stars: Rosalind Russell, Paul Douglas, Marie Wilson Director: Norman Z. McLeod Jo McBain, a divorced socialite and daughter of Senator Tom Roberts, asks her ...

    • 87 Min.
    • 83,4K
    • PizzaFlix
  7. 7/10. Roz Joins The Army. bkoganbing 2 July 2007. Never Wave At A WAC is the apparently weird combination of Buck Privates and Woman of the Year. The odd thing about it is that it actually works and still will get a few laughs from today's audience. This might have been a script offered to Katharine Hepburn, but Hepburn never really got as ...