DCSIMG
 
 

Elizabeth Inglis Movies

1945  
 
Based on a play by Leslie Storm, Tonight and Every Night is a musical wartime morale booster in which star Rita Hayworth is but one of a lively ensemble. Set in battle-scarred Britain, the action takes place in a seedy old music hall, which never misses a performance even at the height of the "blitz". Five times a day like clockwork, American-born entertainer Rosalind Bruce (Rita Hayworth) and her British cohorts put on a show for their ever-appreciative audiences. Along the way, a romance develops between Rosalind and RAF pilot Paul Lundy (Lee Bowman). Providing excellent support are Janet Blair as the troupe's plucky ingenue and Broadway alumnus Marc Platt as the entourage's resident eccentric dancer. The individual numbers are inventively staged, with one scene creatively harnessing the Technicolor process in an eye-popping manner seldom seen in 1940s films. All that Tonight and Every Night lacks is a memorable score, though Rita's solo number "Anywhere" enjoyed brief hit-parade popularity. Incidentally, one of the chorus girls is a slim-and-trim Shelley Winters! ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Rita HayworthLee Bowman, (more)
 
1937  
 
In this claustrophobic drama, a troupe of actors are trapped in a theater after a terrifying landslide comes down upon them. When the dust settles a bit, the cashier is found dead and the cashbox is missing. Two more troupe members almost lose their lives before it is discovered that the perpetrator is a stagehand who is killed accidentally when a support beam falls upon him. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

 Read More

 
1937  
 
In this satire of British-American relations, Edward G. Robinson stars as Dan Armstrong, a hard-sell American saleman whose company sends him to England to learn how to tone down his act. There he meets some distant relatives, the aristocrats Sir Peter and Lady Challoner (Arthur Wontner and Annie Esmond). They invite him to their mansion for the weekend, where among the house guests are the penniless aristocrats the Duke and Duchess of Glenavon (Nigel Bruce and Constance Collier) and their daughter Lady Patricia (Luli Deste), as well as a conniving stockbroker, Henry Graham Manningdale (Ralph Richardson). The Duke and Duchess own only an apparently worthless mine in Rhodesia that supposedly contains a metal called magnelite. Manningdale says that he will develop the mine in exchange for permission to marry Lady Patricia. Armstrong also has designs on Patricia, however, and he engineers a scheme to start a company and sell stock in the mine. ~ Michael Betzold, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Edward G. RobinsonLuli Deste, (more)
 
1934  
 
The popular British husband-and-wife screen team of Anne Grey and Lester Matthews star in Borrowed Clothes. Grey plays an impulsive aristocrat who purchases a failing dress shop. She knows very little about business, but her down-to-earth hubby (Mathews) proves a willing tutor. Slowly but surely, Grey turns the shop into a winning proposition, thereby proving that she's more than an empty-headed socialite. Borrowed Clothes was adapted by Aimee Stuart and Philip Stuart from their own stage play Her Shop; the film was released in the US by Columbia Pictures. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More