
In honor of Independence Day, here's the cover of the June 1957 issue of
Walt Disney's Magazine spotlighting Walt's Revolutionary War-themed live-action feature,
Johnny Tremain. The beautiful photograph by Roger Davidson spotlights the two leads, Hal Stalmaster (who starred as young Mr. Tremain) and Luana Patten. Luana was of course the very talented and appealing Disney child star of the 1940s, starring opposite Bobby Driscoll in such classics as
Song of the South (1946). In the mid-1950s Luana made something of a comeback in such films as
Rock, Pretty Baby (1956), starring Sal Mineo, and of course
Johnny Tremain, which marked Miss Patten's return to the Disney fold. "During my first few days on
Johnny Tremain," said Luana in an interview in which she described the warm welcome she received upon her return to the Disney Studio, "people kept coming up to me, shaking my hand and telling me about incidents that happened to me as a youngster. It really gave me a warm feeling to know that so many remembered me." As an extra element of this story of the close-knit Disney "family,"
Johnny Tremain also features Walt Disney's daughter, Sharon, in a small role—and who according to Luana, was a friend with Miss Patten when both girls were young children who found occasion to be at the Disney Studios.