Ad
related to: goodbye mr chips 1939 review- How Audible Works
Start Your Audible Membership
Sign Up Today & Listen All You Want
- Mystery & Thriller
Killer Mysteries and Thrillers.
Join Audible Today & Listen Now!
- Listen To Indie Romance
Uncover the Steamiest Love Stories.
Only On Audible. Free With Trial.
- Audible Gift Center
Every Great Gift Comes With
A Great Story! Gift A Membership.
- How Audible Works
Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Goodbye, Mr. Chips is a 1939 romantic drama film starring Robert Donat, Greer Garson and directed by Sam Wood.Based on the 1934 novella of the same name by James Hilton, the film is about Mr. Chipping, a beloved aged school teacher and former headmaster of a boarding school, who recalls his career and his personal life over the decades.
The setting for Goodbye, Mr. Chips is probably based on The Leys School, Cambridge, where James Hilton was a pupil (1915–18).Hilton is reported to have said that the inspiration for the protagonist, Mr. Chips, came from many sources, including his father, who was the headmaster of Chapel End School.
Goodbye, Mr. Chips is a 1969 British-American musical film directed by Herbert Ross. The screenplay by Terence Rattigan is based on James Hilton 's 1934 novella Goodbye, Mr. Chips , which was first adapted for the screen in 1939 .
Friedrich Robert Donat (/ ˈ d oʊ n æ t / DOH-nat; 18 March 1905 – 9 June 1958) [1] was an English actor. Making his breakthrough film role in Alexander Korda's The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933), today he is best remembered for his roles in The Count of Monte Cristo (1934), Alfred Hitchcock's The 39 Steps (1935), and Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939), for which he won the Academy Award for ...
Best American Film: Confessions of a Nazi Spy Best Foreign Film: Le quai des brumes (Port of Shadows), France Best Acting: James Cagney - The Roaring Twenties; Bette Davis - Dark Victory and The Old Maid
Mr. Deeds Goes to Town; The Story of Louis Pasteur; Modern Times; Fury; Winterset; The Devil Is a Sissy; Ceiling Zero; Romeo and Juliet; The Prisoner of Shark Island; Green Pastures; 1937: Night Must Fall; The Life of Emile Zola; Black Legion; Camille; Make Way for Tomorrow; The Good Earth; They Won't Forget; Captains Courageous; A Star Is Born ...
James Hilton (9 September 1900 – 20 December 1954) was a British-American [1] novelist and screenwriter. He is best remembered for his novels Lost Horizon, Goodbye, Mr. Chips and Random Harvest, as well as co-writing screenplays for the films Camille (1936) and Mrs. Miniver (1942), the latter earning him an Academy Award.
U.S. Marine standing guard at Shangri-La (1944). The book, published in 1933, caught the notice of the public only after Hilton's Goodbye, Mr. Chips was published in 1934. [citation needed] Lost Horizon became a huge popular success and in 1939 was published in paperback form, as Pocket Book #1, making it the first "mass-market" paperback.
Ad
related to: goodbye mr chips 1939 review