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Black coffee is supposed to be a strong stimulant and powerful enemy of sleep. I found the title optimistic. "[10] The Times reviewed the play again when it opened at the Little Theatre in its issue of 13 May 1931. This time it said that, "Its false scents are made for the triumph of the omniscient Belgian detective, complete according to the ...
The Officers' Mess (1931) Rodney Steps In (1931) Black Coffee (1931) The Other Mrs. Phipps (1932) Once Bitten (1932) The First Mrs. Fraser (1932) Double Dealing (1932) Home, Sweet Home (1933) Mannequin (1934) The Four Masked Men (1934) The Black Abbot (1934) Lord Edgware Dies (1934) Annie, Leave the Room! (1935) The Ace of Spades (1935) Three ...
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The Midshipmaid by Ian Hay and Stephen King-Hall (1931) Orders Are Orders by Ian Hay and Anthony Armstrong (1932) A Present from Margate by Ian Hay and A.E.W. Mason (1933) Night Must Fall by Emlyn Williams (1936) The Man in Half Moon Street by Barré Lyndon (1939) Love in a Mist by Kenneth Horne (1941) Escort by Patrick Hastings (1942)
Claude Austin Trevor Schilsky (7 October 1897 – 22 January 1978) was an Irish actor who had a long career in film and television. [3]He played the parson in John Galsworthy's Escape at the world premiere in London's West End in 1926 and was the only member of the cast to transfer to New York City for the Broadway production a year later.
Cast Genre Notes 77 Park Lane: Albert de Courville: Dennis Neilson-Terry, Betty Stockfeld, Malcolm Keen: Crime [1] Alibi: Leslie S. Hiscott: Austin Trevor, Elizabeth Allan, Franklin Dyall: Drama [2] Almost a Divorce: Jack Raymond, Arthur Varney: Margery Binner, Sydney Howard, Kay Hammond: Comedy [3] The Beggar Student: Victor Hanbury, John Harvel
Title Director Cast Genre Notes The Age for Love: Frank Lloyd: Billie Dove, Edward Everett Horton, Lois Wilson: Comedy: United Artists: Air Eagles: Phil Whitman: Lloyd Hughes, Norman Kerry, Shirley Grey
Alibi is a 1931 British mystery detective film directed by Leslie S. Hiscott and starring Austin Trevor, Franklin Dyall, and Elizabeth Allan. [1]The film was adapted from the 1928 play Alibi by Michael Morton which was in turn based on the 1926 Agatha Christie novel The Murder of Roger Ackroyd featuring her famous Belgian detective Hercule Poirot.