Frazzled Frolic

Connie Francis for Follow The Boys (1963) with Paula Prentis and Russ Tamblyn (Peyton Place, West Side Story). Frazzled Frolic: Follow the Boys Is a Familiar Story By BOSLEY CROWTHER | The New York Times | February 28, 1963

Angie, Bonnie, Libby and Ginger

Connie Francis, born Concetta Rosemarie Franconero, 12 December 1938, Newark, New Jersey. She acted in four movies: Where the Boys Are (1960) Angie; Follow the Boys (1963) Bonnie Pulaski; Looking for Love (1964) Libby Caruso; When the Boys Meet The Girls (1965) Ginger Gray.

Why do thousands of coeds flock to Fort Lauderdale?

“This novel is meant to be a half-gay, half-sad, but always breezy account of that, by now, minor institution — the collegiate goings-on in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, during the spring semester vacation.” Kirkus Review.

highly carbonated elixir of sex, sunshine and beer

Here are all these youngsters jammed together, on the beach, in beer joints and motels—coeds from state universities, fellows from the Ivy League—flirting and making passes, with only one thing on their minds. That is xes spelled backwards. BOSLEY CROWTHER, January 20, 1961. New York Times review.

Connie and Joby sing Gershwin

Connie Francis and Joby Baker in When The Boys Meet The Girls (1965). Variety: Top-featured Connie Francis and Harve Presnell (seemingly cast more from contractual commitments than suitability) are adequate; she as the backwoods Nevada US mail-woman saddled with pop Frank Faylen, a chronic gambler, while Presnell is the bigcity playboy exiled to the boondocks…

Connie Francis

Where the Boys Are (1960) with Frank Gorshin (the Riddler in Batman) as a short-sighted jazz musician and Connie Francis as his muse. Connie Francis, born Concetta Rosemarie Franconero, 12 December 1938, Newark, New Jersey. She acted in four movies: Where the Boys Are (1960) Angie Follow the Boys (1963) Bonnie Pulaski Looking for Love…