Let's Live Tonight
1935 film
- Bradley King
- Gene Markey
- Lilian Harvey
- Tullio Carminati
- Janet Beecher
- Hugh Williams
Production
company
company
Columbia Pictures
Release date
- March 16, 1935 (1935-03-16)
Running time
Let's Live Tonight is a 1935 American musical comedy film directed by Victor Schertzinger and starring Lilian Harvey, Tullio Carminati and Janet Beecher. The film was made as part of an unsuccessful attempt to establish Harvey, who was a top box office draw in Germany, as a major star in Hollywood. Harvey was under contract to Fox Film, but was loaned out to Columbia Pictures for the production.[1] After making it, Harvey returned to Europe, first to Britain to appear in Invitation to the Waltz[2] and then to Germany, where she starred in Black Roses, which relaunched her German career.
Plot
Cast
- Lilian Harvey as Kay 'Carlotta' Routledge
- Tullio Carminati as Nick 'Monte' Kerry
- Janet Beecher as Mrs. Routledge
- Hugh Williams as Brian Kerry
- Tala Birell as Countess Margot de Legere
- Luis Alberni as Mario Weems
- Claudia Coleman as Lily Montrose
- Arthur Treacher as Ozzy Featherstone
- Gilbert Emery as Maharajah de Jazaar
- Virginia Hammond as Mrs. Mott
- Adrian Rosley as Cafe Propreitor
- Max Rabinowitz as Pianist
- André Cheron as Frenchman
- John Binet as French Steward
References
Bibliography
- Ascheid, Antje (2003). Hitler's Heroines: Stardom and Womanhood in Nazi Cinema. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. ISBN 978-1-56639-984-5.
- Bergfelder, Tim; Cargnelli, Christian, eds. (2008). Destination London: German-Speaking Emigrés and British Cinema, 1925–1950. New York: Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-0-85745-019-7.
External links
- Let's Live Tonight at IMDb
- v
- t
- e
Films directed by Victor Schertzinger
- The Pinch Hitter (1917)
- The Millionaire Vagrant (1917)
- The Clodhopper (1917)
- Sudden Jim (1917)
- The Son of His Father (1917)
- His Mother's Boy (1917)
- The Hired Man (1918)
- The Family Skeleton (1918)
- Playing the Game (1918)
- His Own Home Town (1918)
- The Claws of the Hun (1918)
- A Nine O'Clock Town (1918)
- Coals of Fire (1918)
- Quicksand (1918)
- String Beans (1918)
- Hard Boiled (1919)
- Extravagance (1919)
- The Sheriff's Son (1919)
- The Homebreaker (1919)
- The Lady of Red Butte (1919)
- When Doctors Disagree (1919)
- Other Men's Wives (1919)
- Upstairs (1919)
- Jinx (1919)
- Pinto (1920)
- The Blooming Angel (1920)
- The Slim Princess (1920)
- What Happened to Rosa (1920)
- The Concert (1921)
- Beating the Game (1921)
- Made in Heaven (1921)
- The Bootlegger's Daughter (1922)
- The Kingdom Within (1922)
- Head over Heels (1922)
- Mr. Barnes of New York (1922)
- Long Live the King (1923)
- Dollar Devils (1923)
- Refuge (1923)
- The Lonely Road (1923)
- The Man Next Door (1923)
- The Scarlet Lily (1923)
- The Man Life Passed By (1923)
- Chastity (1923)
- Bread (1924)
- A Boy of Flanders (1924)
- Man and Maid (1925)
- Thunder Mountain (1925)
- The Golden Strain (1925)
- Flaming Love (1925)
- The Wheel (1925)
- The Lily (1926)
- Siberia (1926)
- The Return of Peter Grimm (1926)
- Stage Madness (1927)
- The Heart of Salome (1927)
- The Secret Studio (1927)
- The Showdown (1928)
- Forgotten Faces (1928)
- Redskin (1929)
- Nothing but the Truth (1929)
- Fashions in Love (1929)
- The Wheel of Life (1929)
- The Laughing Lady (1929)
- Paramount on Parade (1930)
- Safety in Numbers (1930)
- Heads Up (1930)
- The Woman Between (1931)
- Friends and Lovers (1931)
- Strange Justice (1932)
- Uptown New York (1932)
- The Constant Woman (1933)
- Cocktail Hour (1933)
- My Woman (1933)
- One Night of Love (1934)
- Beloved (1934)
- Let's Live Tonight (1935)
- Love Me Forever (1935)
- The Music Goes 'Round (1936)
- Something to Sing About (1937)
- The Mikado (1939)
- Road to Singapore (1940)
- Rhythm on the River (1940)
- Road to Zanzibar (1941)
- Kiss the Boys Goodbye (1941)
- Birth of the Blues (1941)
- The Fleet's In (1942)
This article about a musical comedy film is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e