Chaste Susanne (1937 film)

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Chaste Susanne
File:Chaste Susanne (1937 film).jpg
Directed by André Berthomieu
Produced by Curtis Bernhardt
Eugène Tucherer
Written by
Based on Chaste Susanne by Antony Mars
Maurice Desvallières
Starring
Music by Jean Gilbert
Cinematography Roy Clark
Edited by Marcel Cohen
Production
company
B.U.P. Française
British Unity Pictures
Release dates
27 May 1937
Running time
90 minutes
Country France
United Kingdom
Language French

Chaste Susanne (French: La chaste Suzanne) is a 1937 French-British comedy film directed by André Berthomieu and starring Raimu, Meg Lemonnier and Henri Garat.[1] It is an adaptation of the 1912 operetta Chaste Susanne by Jean Gilbert, itself based on an earlier play by Antony Mars and Maurice Desvallières. It was made when the 1930s booms in operetta films was at its height.

Made at Ealing Studios in London, it was the French-language version of the British film The Girl in the Taxi. Henri Garat was the only actor to appear in both productions. The film's sets were designed by the art director Jean d'Eaubonne.

Synopsis

In Paris an academy dedicated to promoting virtue awards its annual prize, but accidentally gives it to the wrong woman named Suzanne. The recipient is in fact a dancer who performs at the Moulin Rouge and is conducting an affair with the potential son-in-law of Monsieur des Aubrays, the head of the academy.

Cast

References

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Bibliography

  • Oscherwitz, Dayna & Higgins, MaryEllen . The A to Z of French Cinema. Scarecrow Press, 2009.

External links


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  1. Oscherwitz& Higgins p.361