At Marge's Koffee Kup Cafe, he meets Vickie, an aspiring dancer, who quizzes him about his "gimmick" and promises to give him the "inside dope" on the music industry.
He takes a job as a dishwasher at Marge's Koffee Kup Cafe, where he and Vickie reconcile, but are quickly apprehended by McCauley and Steak, who threaten violence if Bud does not return to them.
The musical director was a high school friend of Arch Hall Jr., the young Alan O'Day, who went on to record a number 1 pop hit called "Undercover Angel" in the 1970s.
Direction by 22 year old Ray Dennis Steckler succeeds in giving film a certain mobility but it couldn't possibly move fast enough to get away from the Nicholas Merriweather script.
Editing is professional, other technical credits ok."[8] Boxoffice wrote: "This low-budget rock 'n' roll entry, featuring a youthful, mostly non-professional cast, will find a suitable audience on double-bill programs primarily for teenagers.
Arch Hall jr, who previously appeared in the same company's The Sadist, stars as a hip-swinging, guitar-playing country boy singer determined to make the grade in Hollywood. ...
Songs, written by Hall in collaboration with Alan O'Day, are refreshing interludes, as are the scene shots of famed Hollywood landmarks.
The script, written by producer Nicholas Merriwether and Robert O. Wehling, with additional dialog by Joe Thomas, is adequate and is given mobility by Ray Dennis Steckler, the director.