Mademoiselle Josette, My Woman (1926 film)

Mademoiselle Josette, My Woman (French: Mademoiselle Josette ma femme, German: Fräulein Josette - Meine Frau) is a 1926 French-German silent film directed by Gaston Ravel and starring Dolly Davis, Livio Pavanelli and Ágnes Eszterházy.[1] It is based on the 1906 play of the same title by Robert Charvay and Paul Gavault.

Mademoiselle Josette, My Woman
Directed byGaston Ravel
Written byRobert Charvay (play)
Paul Gavault (play)
Hans Jacoby
Tony Lekain
StarringDolly Davis
Livio Pavanelli
Ágnes Eszterházy
CinematographyOtto Kanturek
Production
company
Alga Films
Films de France
Distributed byFilmhaus Bruckmann (Germany)
Pathé (France)
Release date
9 September 1926
CountryFrance
Germany
LanguageSilent
French/German intertitles

Cast

gollark: What about swapping "respect for contracts" and "respect for volition of others"?
gollark: How would you just get an "evil" version anyway? No (long-lived) empire really just sets out and goes "let's be evil" surely?
gollark: Someone asked this somewhere, I'm sure…
gollark: The trouble with brains is that if you stick them into full-power-off (no oxygen supply or whatever) they can't really turn back on again, unlike (sane) computer systems.
gollark: From my limited trek knowledge they just sit there doing nothing.

References

  1. Limbacher p.128

Bibliography

  • James L. Limbacher. Haven't I seen you somewhere before?: Remakes, sequels, and series in motion pictures and television, 1896-1978. Pierian Press, 1979.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.