Woman to Woman (play)

Woman to Woman is a 1921 play by the British writer Michael Morton.[1][2] During the First World War, a British officer and a French dancer meet in a doomed romance.

Film adaptations

The play has been adapted into film on three occasions: a 1923 version directed by Graham Cutts with assistance from a young Alfred Hitchcock, a 1929 version directed by Victor Saville and a 1946 version directed by Maclean Rogers.[2]

gollark: Why does it have *high* political freedom?
gollark: Oh, I have Fracto-China too, don't I?
gollark: For ethical reasons, children are produced centrally in vats.
gollark: Notelia is a very liberal nation. We have legalized arbitrary marriage digraphs, mandatory gun ownership, no prisons, no sports, cannabis, the metric system, no alcohol, and recreational nuclear weapons (also distributed to other nations at random).
gollark: HDMI is quite old but also ceased to exist for a while, TN16 is new.

References

Bibliography

  • Rachael Low: The History of British Film: Volume VII. Routledge, 1997.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.