Stowaway

She sings and speaks Chinese!

6.7
19361h 27m

Chin-Ching gets lost in Shanghai and is befriended by American playboy Tommy Randall. She falls asleep in his car which winds up on a ship headed for America. Susan Parker, also on the ship, marries Randall to give Chin-Ching a family.

Production

Logo for 20th Century Fox

Cast

Photo of Shirley Temple

Shirley Temple

Barbara 'Ching-Ching' Stewart

Photo of Robert Young

Robert Young

Tommy Randall

Photo of Alice Faye

Alice Faye

Susan Parker

Photo of Eugene Pallette

Eugene Pallette

The Colonel

Photo of Helen Westley

Helen Westley

Mrs. Hope

Photo of Allan Lane

Allan Lane

Richard Hope

Photo of Astrid Allwyn

Astrid Allwyn

Kay Swift

Photo of Jayne Regan

Jayne Regan

Dora Day

Photo of Julius Tannen

Julius Tannen

First Mate

Photo of Paul McVey

Paul McVey

Second Mate

Photo of Helen Jerome Eddy

Helen Jerome Eddy

Mrs. Kruikshank

Photo of William Stack

William Stack

Alfred Kruikshank

Photo of Honorable Wu

Honorable Wu

Li Ze Mon

Photo of Richard Loo

Richard Loo

Chinese Merchant (uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

Believe it or not, Shirley Temple has got herself a Chinese name ("Ching Ching") and lost in Shanghai. The god of luck is looking down favourably on her, though, and she happens upon "Tommy" (Robert Young). She befriends him, takes a nap in his car and next thing is the eponymous lass on a Transpacific liner heading to the USA. He is a decent cove and agrees to take her under his wing but with their destination looming, an orphanage for her beckons! Unmarried men can't adopt. Meantime, "Susan" (Alice Faye) is also on the boat and also takes a shine to the little girl - and to her minder, too! She's engaged to the rather wimpish "Richard" (Allan Lane) though and her mother (Helen Westley) wants no truck with "Tommy" - so, yep - you've guessed it - it falls to the curly-haired star to do a bit of fixing so that true love will blossom and she will hopefully be spared being in a real version of "Annie". The instantly recognisable dulcet tones of Eugenie Pallette help keep things on an even keel and Temple delivers with her usual and natural charm. On that last point, she always comes across as charismatic and never precocious, and here there's a germ of chemistry between her, Young and Faye. Messrs. Revel & Gordon have provided a few gentle numbers to allow Temple to show off some of her nimble dancing and the writing some entertainingly bilingual dexterity. It's light-hearted and characterful fun, this, and though you'll probably never remember it, it's enjoyable.

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