Original vs. current versions
The original-release print included fragments of popular songs (for example,
Dorothy Lee sings a few phrases of the song "I Love You So Much" from the
Wheeler and Woolsey comedy
The Cuckoos). When Blackhawk was preparing the film for home-movie release, company officer
David Shepard tried to clear the rights to the music, only to find opposition: "To clear music rights in a film (any film) at that time, one had to deal with an iron maiden called Miss Mingle at the Harry Fox Agency in New York. Harry Fox Agency then had monopoly representation of virtually all music publishers for so-called 'sync rights.' Miss Mingle would not consider licensing sync rights unless one could first prove to her that one had a license on the film itself. To show her that the film had fallen into the public domain or was never copyrighted in the first place cut no ice with her." With this avenue closed to Shepard, he was forced to delete the song snippets from the Blackhawk reprint. However, another home-movie distributor, Thunderbird Films, had its own print of
The Stolen Jools with the music intact, and issued reprints in competition with Blackhawk. Actor
Bert Lytell appeared in the original-release print at the very end of the film, asking movie audiences to donate to the NVA's charity appeal. Current film and video versions in circulation do not include Lytell's curtain speech. ==See also==