Arthur Laurents spent World War II with the Army Pictorial Service based at the
film studio in
Astoria, Queens, and rose to the rank of sergeant. After his discharge, he wrote a play called
Home of the Brave in nine consecutive nights that was inspired by a photograph of
GIs in a
South Pacific jungle. The drama about
anti-Semitism in the military opened on
Broadway on December 27, 1945, and ran for 69 performances. When Laurents sold the rights to Hollywood, he was told that the lead character would be turned from Jewish into black because "Jews have been done". Producer
Stanley Kramer filmed in secrecy under the
working title of
High Noon. The film was completed in thirty days, for the cost of US$525,000, with Kramer using three different units at the same time. The majority of the film was made on indoor sets, jungle scenes in
Baldwin Village, Los Angeles and the climax that took place on
Malibu beach with a former navy PT boat. Associate producer Robert Stillman financed the film with the help of his father, without the usual procedure of borrowing funds from banks. The film was the motion picture debut of James Edwards and Frank Lovejoy. The
New York Herald Tribune reported that a man named Herbert Tweedy imitated the sound of twelve different birds native to the South Pacific for the film. ==Reception==