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Arthur Hornblow Jr. (March 15, 1893 – July 17, 1976) was an American film producer. Four of his movies received Academy Award nominations for Best Picture. Four of his movies received Academy Award nominations for Best Picture.
In 1932, Loy had begun dating producer Arthur Hornblow Jr., when he was still married to Juliette Crosby: [42] Loy and Hornblow themselves married in 1936, in between filming these four successive productions. [43] She was later rumored to have had affairs with co-star Tracy between 1935 and 1936, while filming Whipsaw and Libeled Lady.
Wings in the Dark was produced by Arthur Hornblow, Jr. The film was the first that Loy and Grant made together, although Loy's biographer Emily Leider says that Wings in the Dark "wastes their talents and prompts an unintentional laugh fest."
The Major and the Minor is a 1942 American romantic comedy film starring Ginger Rogers and Ray Milland.It was the first American film directed by Billy Wilder. [2] The screenplay credited to Wilder and Charles Brackett is "suggested by" the 1923 play Connie Goes Home by Edward Childs Carpenter, based on the 1921 Saturday Evening Post story "Sunny Goes Home" by Fannie Kilbourne.
Arthur Hornblow, Jr. Starring: Lynne Overman William Frawley Roscoe Karns Mary Brian George Barbier Marjorie Gateson: Cinematography: Edward Cronjager: Edited by: Edward Dmytryk: Music by: John Leipold
The Heavenly Body is a 1944 American romantic comedy film directed by Alexander Hall and starring William Powell, Hedy Lamarr and James Craig.Based on a story by Jacques Théry, with a screenplay by Michael Arlen and Walter Reisch, the film is about the beautiful wife of a professional astronomer who becomes convinced that her astrologer's prediction that she will meet her true love will come ...
Paramount Pictures and producer Arthur Hornblow, Jr. conceived High, Wide and Handsome as a “big-budget” musical that would deliver “prestige entertainment” supported by a talented cast and crew. [7] High, Wide and Handsome was filmed on location in Chino, California. The principle filming began in early January 1937 and finished in ...
Swing High, Swing Low is a 1937 American romantic comedy drama film directed by Mitchell Leisen and starring Carole Lombard and Fred MacMurray. [1] [2]It is the second of three film adaptations of the popular 1927 Broadway play Burlesque by George Manker Watters and Arthur Hopkins, after The Dance of Life (1929) and before When My Baby Smiles at Me (1948).