His English Wife
His English Wife (German: Die Lady ohne Schleier, Swedish: Hans engelska fru) is a 1927 German-Swedish silent drama film directed by Gustaf Molander and starring Lil Dagover, Gösta Ekman and Karin Swanström.[1]
His English Wife | |
---|---|
Directed by | Gustaf Molander |
Produced by | Oscar Hemberg |
Written by | Paul Merzbach |
Starring | Lil Dagover Gösta Ekman Karin Swanström |
Cinematography | Åke Dahlqvist Julius Jaenzon |
Release date | 17 January 1927 |
Running time | 150 minutes |
Country | Germany Sweden |
Language | Silent Swedish intertitles |
The film's sets were designed by the art director Vilhelm Bryde.
Cast
- Lil Dagover as Cathleen Paget, née Brock
- Gösta Ekman as Ivor Willington
- Karin Swanström as Mrs. Brock, Cathleen's mother
- Håkan Westergren as Bruce Brock
- Brita Appelgren as Poppy Brock
- Stina Berg as Antje
- Margit Manstad as Faucigny
- Vilhelm Bryde as Lionel Jessop
- Carl-Gunnar Wingård as Waiter
- Eric Gustafson
- Josua Bengtson as Train announcer
- Ragnar Arvedson as Artist
- Olga Andersson as London lady
- Margit Rosengren as Lilian
- Urho Somersalmi as Birger Holm, landowner
gollark: My thing provides different names for each.
gollark: They do in `ps ax` but not `ps -A` or `top`.
gollark: ```pythondef set_first_argv(name): libc = ctypes.CDLL(None) getenv = libc.getenv getenv.argtypes = [ctypes.c_char_p] getenv.restype = ctypes.c_void_p envloc = libc.getenv(b"USER") scan = b"python3" ssize = len(scan) buf = ctypes.create_string_buffer(ssize) for i in range(0, -2048, -1): ctypes.memmove(buf, envloc + i, ssize) res = b"".join(buf[j] for j in range(ssize)) if res == scan: argv0 = envloc + i break else: return del buf name += b"\x00" * 128 buf = ctypes.create_string_buffer(len(name)) buf.value = name ctypes.memmove(argv0, buf, len(name))```↑ GAZE upon it
gollark: My evil one does, but this is a non-evil one.
gollark: That requires root, octachoron.
References
- Donoghue p.viii
Bibliography
- Daniel Donoghue. Lady Godiva: A Literary History of the Legend. John Wiley & Sons, 2008.
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