In the Good Old Summertime is a film remake of
Ernst Lubitsch's 1940 comedy
The Shop Around the Corner, which starred
James Stewart and
Margaret Sullavan. In early October 1948, the
Los Angeles Times reported that
Judy Garland,
Peter Lawford, and
June Allyson had been mentioned for potential roles. In his autobiography,
Joe Pasternak stated when he came on board as producer, Allyson and
Van Johnson were set to appear in the film. However, Allyson became unavailable, and MGM executive
Benjamin Thau recommended Judy Garland as a replacement. Pasternak had previously produced Garland's 1943 film
Presenting Lily Mars. At the time, Garland had been removed from
The Barkleys of Broadway (1949) when she became ill during rehearsals. MGM studio executive
Arthur Freed made the decision to suspend her without pay on July 18, 1948. She was replaced in the film by
Ginger Rogers. During the interim, Garland made a cameo appearance in
Words and Music (1948) and was allowed to make radio appearances during the autumn. Inside Thau's office, Pasternak offered Garland the lead female role, to which she replied: "Why, Joe, I'd love to do the picture with you." Garland's suspension was lifted on October 20, 1948. That same day, the
Los Angeles Times reported Garland and Van Johnson had been cast, with
Robert Z. Leonard as the director. Leonard had previously directed Garland in
Ziegfeld Girl (1941).
Principal photography began on November 22, 1948. Familiar with Garland's personal difficulties on previous MGM productions, Pasternak saw to it the atmosphere while filming was favorably accommodable to Garland. Pasternak even instructed a single rose be anonymously placed inside Garland's dressing room every morning, with a card that read "Happy Day, Judy". In his autobiography, he wrote: "There was never a word uttered in recrimination when she was late, didn't show up, or couldn't go on. Those of us who worked with her knew her magical genius and respected it."
Buster Keaton—who returned to MGM after he was fired from the studio in 1933—was hired by Robert Z. Leonard as a gag-writer to help him devise a way for a violin to get broken that would be both comedic and plausible. Keaton devised an elaborate stunt that would achieve the desired result. However, Leonard realized Keaton was the only actor who could execute it properly, thus he cast Keaton in the film. Keaton also devised the sequence in which Johnson inadvertently wrecks Garland's hat and coached Johnson intensively in how to perform the scene. Garland's then three-year-old daughter,
Liza Minnelli, made her film debut, walking with her mother and Van Johnson in the film's closing shot. Production wrapped five days ahead of schedule on January 27, 1949, which had impressed MGM studio president
Louis B. Mayer. He asked Van Johnson: "What did you do to Judy?" Johnson replied, "We made her feel needed. We joked with her and kept her happy." The song "
Last Night When We Were Young" was written in the 1930s by
Harold Arlen and
E. Y. "Yip" Harburg for the
Metropolitan Opera star
Lawrence Tibbett. Garland loved it and wanted to include it in the film. It was recorded and filmed but when the picture was released, it was cut from the final print. The audio recording of "Last Night When We Were Young" was featured on several of Garland's MGM record albums and she also later recorded it for
Capitol Records in the 1950s. The entire footage of the number was found in the MGM vaults and included in the
PBS documentary
American Masters: Judy Garland: By Myself in 2004. ==Reception==