- The daughter of the American ambassador to France comes to the aid of American soldiers after a grumpy U. S. senator thinks about closing off Paris to the servicemen.
- Joan Fisk, daughter of the American ambassador to France, is bored with entertaining the wives of visiting V.I.P.s and decides to conduct an experiment. She accepts a date with an American G.I. and tries to prove to her father and his friends that not all soldiers are wolves. But by the end of their first date, after wine, music and the young man's charms have swept her off her feet, she realizes that she may have won more than the bet.—Chris Stone <jstone@bellatlantic.net>
- It's 1946 in Paris. American forces are in France helping with recovery from WW II. A visiting American Senator wants to make Paris off-limits to GIs on leave. He and his wife come to visit and they stay at the American embassy. The ambassador is a widower whose single daughter helps him handle visiting dignitaries as well as represent the embassy and America in civic events and social affairs. She is engaged to a European prince. Two older GIs weasel their way into a charity benefit show in a swanky hotel. The ambassador's daughter is one of the volunteer guest models. After she catches the eye of Sgt. Danny Sullivan, the lives of all them are in for an interesting time in this very funny, sophisticated comedy.—SimonJack
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Top Gap
By what name was The Ambassador's Daughter (1956) officially released in Canada in English?
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