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We're Not Married! is a 1952 American anthology romantic comedy film directed by Edmund Goulding. [2] It was released by 20th Century Fox. [3]The screenplay was written by Nunnally Johnson, while the story was adapted by Dwight Taylor from Gina Kaus's and Jay Dratler's unpublished work "If I Could Remarry".
Gaynor was one of several stars in the 1952 anthology comedy We're Not Married! and was top-billed in the 1952 musical Bloodhounds of Broadway, which made $2 million (equivalent to $23.68 million in 2024). [14] Fox cast her in The I Don't Care Girl (1952) as Eva Tanguay. The film made $1.25 million. [15]
She was part of the ensemble cast of 1952’s “We’re Not Married!” along with Marilyn Monroe and Zsa Zsa Gabor; the same year she starred in the musicals “Bloodhounds of Broadway,” based ...
With a Song in My Heart (1952) as Don Ross; Wait Till the Sun Shines, Nellie (1952) as Ben Halper; We're Not Married! (1952) as Jeff Norris; O. Henry's Full House (1952) as Horace (segment "The Cop and the Anthem") The I Don't Care Girl (1953) as Ed McCoy; Tonight We Sing (1953) as Sol Hurok; Down Among the Sheltering Palms (1953) as Lieutenant ...
We're Not Married! Edmund Goulding: Ginger Rogers, Marilyn Monroe, Paul Douglas: Romantic comedy: 20th Century Fox: What Price Glory? John Ford: James Cagney, Dan Dailey, Corinne Calvet: War: 20th Century Fox; remake of 1926 film: When in Rome: Clarence Brown: Van Johnson, Paul Douglas, Joseph Calleia: Comedy drama: MGM: Wild Horse Ambush: Fred ...
In the 1940s, director Preston Sturges cast Bracken in two of his films, The Miracle of Morgan's Creek, opposite Betty Hutton, and Hail the Conquering Hero. Due to the popularity of these films, Eddie Bracken was a household name during World War II. [citation needed] He made numerous radio broadcasts and had his own program, The Eddie Bracken ...
Brody also made sure to say that his wife, who he married in 2014, "taught" him all he knows. " She gets the good stuff. That's not even like the A-material ," he teased.
Carl Henry Vogt (February 19, 1895 – May 12, 1956), known by his stage name Louis Calhern, was an American actor. [1] Described as a “star leading man of the theater and a star character actor of the screen,” [2] he appeared in over 100 roles on the Broadway stage and in films and television, between 1923 and 1956.