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The Desert Song is a 1929 American pre-Code sound (All-Talking) operetta film directed by Roy Del Ruth and starring John Boles, Carlotta King, Louise Fazenda, and Myrna Loy. It was photographed partly in two-color Technicolor, the first film released by Warner Bros. to include footage in color. The film included a 10-minute intermission during ...
1929: Fancy Baggage (Part Talkie) Myrna: John G. Adolfi: Audrey Ferris: Lost film Hardboiled Rose (Part Talkie) Rose Duhamel: F. Harmon Weight: William Collier, Jr. Film survives, but the soundtrack is lost, save for the fourth disc The Desert Song: Azuri: Roy Del Ruth: John Boles, Carlotta King: Technicolor sequences are lost, only black and ...
The Desert Song is an operetta with music by Sigmund Romberg and book and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II, Otto Harbach and Frank Mandel. It was inspired by the 1925 uprising of the Riffs , a group of Berber fighters, against French colonial rule in Morocco. [ 1 ]
The Desert Song is a 1943 American musical film. It was directed by Robert Florey and starred Dennis Morgan, Irene Manning and Bruce Cabot. [2] It is based on the 1926 operetta with music by Sigmund Romberg. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Art Direction (Charles Novi, Jack McConaghy).
The Desert Song, directed by Roy Del Ruth Devil-May-Care , directed by Sidney Franklin , starring Ramón Novarro Diary of a Lost Girl ( Tagebuch einer Verlorenen ), directed by G. W. Pabst , starring Louise Brooks – ( Germany )
The original plot is more-or-less adhered to, with some significant alterations. Benny is depicted as a comic Bob Hope-like coward, but not as a sissy.El Khobar's alter ego is that of a mild-mannered (but not squeamish) Latin tutor and anthropologist, whom Birabeau (Ray Collins) hires to keep Margot (Kathryn Grayson) from flirting with his regiment.
A Song of Kentucky; Applause; The Battle of Paris; Blaze o' Glory; Broadway; Broadway Babies; The Broadway Hoofer; The Broadway Melody; Broadway Scandals; Close Harmony; The Cock-Eyed World; The Cocoanuts; Dance Hall; The Dance of Life; The Desert Song; Devil-May-Care; Footlights and Fools; The Forward Pass; Fox Movietone Follies of 1929 ...
On with the Show! is a 1929 American sound (All-Talking) pre-Code musical film produced by Warner Bros. Filmed in two-color Technicolor, the film became the first all-talking, all-color feature-length film, and the second color film released by Warner Bros.; the first was the partly color musical The Desert Song (1929).