Reet, Petite, and Gone is a 1947 American musical race film produced and released by Astor Pictures.
It was the second of three feature films produced and directed by short-subject director William Forest Crouch starring singer and bandleader Louis Jordan.
Talbot wants to conspire with Rusty to marry and then divorce Jarvis Jr. so that she and Henry will split the estate.
Jarvis Jr. is fooled by Talbot's ruse and believes that he must marry soon to avoid the distribution of the estate to charity.
Crouch made his films on low budgets with fast-paced, assembly-line methods at the former Edison studio in New York City.