Rush Hughes Movies
More burdened with leaden production numbers than plot, Rosalie took Sigmund Romberg and George Gershwin's 1928 Broadway hit, threw out most of the songs, including "How Long Has This Been Going On?," but retained the spindly story of the incognito Princess Rosalie of Romanza (Eleanor Powell), who falls head-over-heels in love with All-American Dick Thorpe (Nelson Eddy), although she finds him conceited at first. But Dick gallantly flies to Romanza where the crooning Charles Lindbergh lands in the middle of yet another comic opera revolution. Rosalie, of course, is engaged to someone else, but after a series of misadventures and a colossal closing number, the star-crossed lovers decide to settle down together in democratic America. Cole Porter was hired to write a new score and Eleanor Powell, Nelson Eddy, and newcomer Ilona Massey perform "I've Got a Strange New Rhythm in My Heart," "Why Should I Care?," "Spring Love is in the Air," "It's all Over but the Shouting," "Who Knows?," "To Love and Not to Love," and, most memorably, "In the Still of the Night." ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Nelson Eddy, Eleanor Powell, (more)
Before sitting down to watch Love and Hisses, it's important to know that columnist Walter Winchell and bandleader Ben Bernie were engaged in a phony but highly publicized feud in the late 1930s. For the purposes of this film, the source of the Winchell-Bernie contretemps is pretty nightclub singer Simone Simon. Secretly signing the girl to a contract, Bernie spreads rumors that the girl has no talent, knowing full well that his "friendly enemy" Winchell will then give her a huge build-up in his newspaper column. Upon finding out that he's been hoodwinked, Winchell gets even by having Bernie kidnapped by a gang of phony hoodlums. With all this going on, it's easy to forget that legendary Broadway clown Bert Lahr is also in Love and Hisses. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Walter Winchell, Ben Bernie, (more)
This comedy-melodrama, based on the novel by Rupert Hughes (who also directed), blends fiction and reality to tell the story of a young woman's rise in Hollywood; the film uses real stars and productions (even Charles Chaplin filming A Woman of Paris) as its backdrop. Eleanor Boardman plays Remember Steddon, better known as Mem. Mem is a small-town girl who marries slick bad guy Owen Scudder (Lew Cody); Owen insures his brides and then murders them for the money. After the wedding, Mem starts to have her doubts about him and runs away while their train is chugging through the desert. She happens on a film crew and gets work as an extra, later becoming a famous dramatic actress in Hollywood with the help of director Frank Claymore (Richard Dix). Scudder finally tracks her down during a shoot involving a circus tent; when a storm sets the tent on fire, Scudder loses his life saving Mem from a wind machine's propeller. Freed from her marriage, Mem is able to choose between Claymore and her leading man. Boardman, whose first starring role finds her surrounded by a long and impressive supporting cast, wound up at the Goldwyn studios through a "New Faces" contest. Her co-winner, future star William Haines, also had a bit part as the company's assistant director. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Eleanor Boardman, Mae Busch, (more)
Written and directed by Rupert Hughes to take a jab at the inconsistent divorce laws (back in the days when marriages were thought to be sacred), this satire ends on a surprisingly melodramatic note. Roy Tappan (Lew Cody) gets a quickie Reno divorce, which becomes final only hours before he weds his new sweetheart, Dora (Carmel Myers) -- who has also just gotten a divorce. Tappan's ex-wife Emily (Helene Chadwick) weds a former boyfriend, Walter Heath (George Walsh), only to discover that her new marriage isn't legal in the state where she's living. Meanwhile, Tappan and Dora discover they are broke -- both assumed the other was wealthy -- so he wires his aunt (Dale Fuller) for money. She replies that she will send him the funds if he gives her his two children from Emily. Desperate for money, Tappan kidnaps the kids (Robert de Gilbill and Virginia Loomis) and takes them to his aunt. After a frantic search, Emily finally finds her children and takes them, and Heath, to Yellowstone Park, where the couple is considered legally married. Tappan goes after them and the two men battle it out. After being thrown into the churning pool of a geyser, Tappan's body is shot into the air, and he is crushed to death on the rocks. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Helene Chadwick, Lew Cody, (more)
The massacre of the Huguenots, previously dramatized in broad strokes by Griffith's Intolerance, served as the basis for director Frank Lloyd's Ashes of Vengeance. Norma Talmadge stars as a Huguenot lass who stands defiant against the persecution of the French royal court. She is protected by Conway Tearle, a French noble who refuses to go along with the de Medici's murderous machinations. Josephine Crowell, who played Catherine de Medici in Intolerance, here repeats the role. Director Lloyd and H. B. Somerville adapted the screenplay of Ashes of Vengeance from Somerville's novel of the same name. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Norma Talmadge, Conway Tearle, (more)
Writer Rupert Hughes chose this predictable story as his first directorial effort, but he brings it fresh life with the help of Colleen Moore (who, at the time, was a rising star, not yet the icon for a generation of flappers). Moore plays Idalene Nobbin, the classic ugly duckling, both homely and gauche. Attending a dance thrown by the popular Prue Nickerson (Laura LaPlante) only adds to her woes. Two boys she meets there -- Phin Larrabee (Rush Hughes) and Roy Duncan (Tom Gallery) -- make her an object of ridicule. Finally, at the Junior Prom, her humiliation is so great that she runs out of the building, right in the path of an oncoming car. Idalene is not killed, but both her legs are broken. A good-hearted pair -- young society girl Pamela Shiel (Gertrude Astor) and her pal, Walt Breen (Richard Dix) -- pick her up, and while she is recuperating, teach her how to be stylish and beautiful. It works, and Breen falls in love with the lovely girl who has emerged from her shell. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Colleen Moore, Richard Dix, (more)









