In East Los Angeles in the 1920s, Alton
Glenn Miller fends off poverty by repeatedly hocking his trombone
from pawnshop owner W. Kranz and then buying it back when he earns a
little money. While attending yet another musician-for-hire
job with his best friend, pianist Chummy MacGregor, Glenn is thrown
out yet again for playing his jazzy arrangements. Soon after,
Kranz informs them that Ben Pollack is holding tryouts for his band
the next week. Hoping to sell his arrangements, Glenn leaves
his trombone and brings only his work to Ben, who spurns them.
After Chummy slips them to an auditioning musician, however, Ben
hires Glenn immediately.
With his advance, Glenn buys faux pearls
for his college sweetheart, Helen Burger, but when the band tours
near her Denver, Colorado home a few weeks later, Helen, who has not
heard from Glenn in two years, barely remembers him.
Undaunted, Glenn insists that she meet him after his job that
evening, but by midnight, Glenn has not appeared and a furious Helen
goes to sleep. Three hours later, Glenn wakes her outside her
window, quickly charming her into driving to his parents' house
nearby.
At the Millers', Helen is surprised to
discover that the whole family considers her Glenn's girlfriend.
They then visit their alma mater, the University of Colorado, where,
to Glenn's chagrin, Helen admits that her favorite song is "Little
Brown Jug." Although Helen begins to fall for his sincerity
and passion for creating a new style of music, Glenn races off to
join Chummy, promising only to call from the road.
Two years later, Ben's band is gaining
in popularity and moving from New York to Atlantic City, but Glenn
remains behind, hoping to work on his arrangements with the help of
band booker Don Haynes. Soon, Glenn is back to pawning his
trombone, and accepts an offer to play in an orchestra for a musical
play. One night, upon hearing "Little Brown Jug," Glenn calls
Helen and asks her to come to New York that night to get married.
Although she responds that she is engaged to another man, Glenn,
ignoring her protests, urges her to call the number Pennsylvania
6-5000 when she arrives. Helen is at first disdainful, but,
drawn to Glenn, soon finds herself on a train to New York.
There, Glenn sweeps her over to their
impromptu wedding service, and that night after Glenn's show, the
couple return to their honeymoon suite to discover that the boys in
the band have arranged a night out at Connie's Inn in Harlem.
At the club, Glenn joins jazz greats such as Louis Armstrong and
Gene Krupa onstage, finally carrying Helen over the threshold around
dawn.
Months later, Glenn is working steadily
as a musician, but Helen prompts him to return to his dream of
arranging. With her encouragement, he begins studying new
compositions and writes "Moonlight Serenade." They are dismayed,
however, when the song is converted into a nightclub number, and
Helen convinces Glenn that he should form his own band. He,
Chummy and Don put together a budget that seems unattainable, but
Helen calmly reveals that she has been saving for the "Glenn Miller
Band Fund" for years.
_NRFPT_02_small.jpg)
Six
months later, the band is barely breaking even, and Glenn despairs
that he may never find the special sound for which he is searching.
When their truck breaks just before a job at Boston's State
Ballroom, Glenn stays behind, and later discovers that it has been
cancelled and Helen is in the hospital, having collapsed from an
exhaustion-induced miscarriage. Although the doctor declares
that Helen can no longer bear children, Glenn promises that they
will have a boy and a girl.
The next day, State Ballroom owner Si
Schribman visits Helen and, sorry for having cancelled the band,
agrees to book them for an upcoming date. Glenn insists upon
hiring a large band, and with Si's backing, tries out new
arrangements. The night before they open, the trumpeter cuts
his lip, and when Glenn replaces him with the clarinetist on
"Moonlight Serenade," he finally achieves his unique sound, and a
standing ovation.
Over the next years, Glenn's sound
sweeps the country, propelling his records to the top of the charts
and providing Glenn, Helen and their adopted son Stevie with a
luxuriant life style. On the couple's tenth anniversary, Glenn
and Helen each plan a surprise for the other: Helen introduces Glenn
to his new adopted daughter, and he throws her a party at which he
plays his new song, "Pennsylvania 6-5000," and presents her with a
small brown jug as a gift.
Later, as Glenn scores a Hollywood film,
Helen delivers the War Office letter which designates Glenn as an
Army captain, and supports his decision to travel overseas to play
for the troops. At first, Glenn is forced to lead the Army
band in dull marching tunes, but when he spices up the marches, an
impressed General Arnold promotes him to bandleader. Assigned
to London, Glenn bids his family a tearful goodbye at the airport,
promising to "be right back."
Overseas, the soldiers cheer as Glenn
bravely leads the band amid air raids and falling bombs. While
the war rages, through the invasion of France, D-day and the Allied
liberation of Paris, Glenn writes to Helen about his postwar plans,
and urges her to listen to his Christmas broadcast from Paris.
On December 15, 1944, he boards the flight from London to Paris, but
the plane never lands. Just before Christmas, Helen receives
the news that Glenn has disappeared, and, though devastated, listens
to the Parisian broadcast with the children, Chummy and Si.
When she hears Glenn's band playing his newest jazz arrangement of
"Little Brown Jug," Helen realizes that Glenn's music and legacy
will remain long after his death.