Too Many Wives
Too Many Wives is a 1937 comedy film directed by Ben Holmes and starring Anne Shirley. It lost $35,000.[1]
Too Many Wives | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ben Holmes |
Written by | Dorothy Yost Lois Eby John Grey |
Starring | Anne Shirley Barbara Pepper |
Cinematography | Nicholas Musuraca |
Edited by | Desmond Marquette |
Distributed by | RKO Radio Pictures |
Release date |
|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $105,000[1] |
Box office | $122,000[1] |
Plot
To gain a job as a newspaper reporter, desperate dog walker Barry Trent lies that he is married with children and needs the employment badly. When he begins dating Betty Jackson, his lies come back to bite him, including when her high-society suitor Clabby pays a woman named Angela a thousand dollars to lie that she is Barry's wife.
A robbery of a valuable stamp is a further complication, but Barry solves the crime (a dog has the stamp) and then races to city hall to stop Betty from marrying Clabby.
Cast
- Anne Shirley as Betty
- John Morley as Barry
- Gene Lockhart as Winfield
- Barbara Pepper as Angela
- Frank Melton as Clabby
gollark: There's no literal Cartesian theatre going on where it has to rotate the image again to project it onto our consciousness.
gollark: I don't think that particularly matters. We define our perceptual up and down and such based on vision.
gollark: Also merging together information from saccades (rapid eye movements to look at more of a scene with the fovea) and correcting for orientation/vibrations/movement.
gollark: And the brain does a lot of fancy stuff to pretend to have a coherent visual field despite the blind spot and the fact that only a small region (the fovea) can actually sense color well.
gollark: I read that somewhere, I forgot where.
References
- Richard Jewel, 'RKO Film Grosses: 1931-1951', Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television, Vol 14 No 1, 1994 p57
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.