Strictly Dishonorable (1951 film)


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Strictly Dishonorable
(1951)

title card
Directed by Melvin Frank
Norman Panama
Produced by Melvin Frank
Norman Panama
Written by Preston Sturges (play)
Melvin Frank
Norman Panama
Starring Ezio Pinza
Janet Leigh
Music by Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco
Lennie Hayton
Cinematography Ray June
Editing by Cotton Warburton
Distributed by MGM
Release date(s) 3 July 1951 (US)
Running time 86 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Strictly Dishonorable is a 1951 romantic comedy film written, produced and directed by Melvin Frank and Norman Panama, and starring Ezio Pinza and Janet Leigh. It is the second film to be based on Preston Sturges' 1929 hit Broadway play of the same name after a pre-Code film released by Universal Pictures in 1931 with the same title.


Contents

Plot

In New York in the 1920s, amorous opera star Augustino "Gus" Caraffa (Ezio Pinza) crosses paths with Isabelle Perry (Janet Leigh), a naive music student from Mississippi who is his biggest fan. When a news photographer catches them in a kiss, it is proposed that they get married in name only to avoid a scandal. Isabelle, who is in love with Gus, agrees to the charade, hoping that he will eventuallly fall in love with her.[1][2]

Cast

  • Ezio Pinza as Count Augustino "Gus" Caraffa
  • Janet Leigh as Isabelle Perry
  • Millard Mitchell as Bill Dempsey
  • Gale Robbins as Marie Donnelly
  • Maria Palmer as Countess Lili Szadvany
  • Esther Minciotti as Mme. Maria Caraffa
  • Silvio Minciotti as Uncle Nito
  • Arthur Franz as Henry Greene
  • Sandro Giglio as Tomasso
  • Hugh Sanders as Harry Donnelly
  • Mario Siletti as Luigi
Ezio Pinza, the star of Strictly Dishonorable (1951)

Cast notes:

  • Opera star Ezio Pinza had previously shot the film Mr. Imperium before working on Strictly Dishonorable, but the current film was released first, so it marks his dramatic acting debut. Pinza went on to make only one more film, Tonight We Sing (1953), with Roberta Peters and Isaac Stern.[3][4][5]
  • Greta Garbo, John Gilbert and Lewis Stone among others, appear in archival footage from the silent film A Woman of Affairs (1928). Stone played the part of "Judge Dempsey" in the 1931 version of Strictly Dishonorable.[6]
  • "Dempsey" was the maiden name of Preston Sturges' mother.
  • The prolific comic character actress Kathleen Freeman appears uncredited as a movie theatre organist.
  • Scott R. Beal, who appears uncredited in the bit part of a vendor, was primarily an assistant director. He received an Academy Award as "Best Assistant Director" in 1934 and was nominated again in 1935.[7]

Songs


Song notes:

  • Il ritorno di Césare is a fictitious opera, created by Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco for the film, and staged by Vladimir Rosing.[3]

Production

Preston Sturges approached MGM with the idea of doing a remake of Strictly Dishonorable with Ezio Pinza, and received $60,000 for the rights, but was disappointed when he wasn't hired to write the screenplay for the film.[3]

Strictly Dishonorable was in production from mid-January to mid-March 1951,[9] and was released on 3 July of that year.[10]

Adaptations

Lux Radio Theatre broadcast a radio adaptation of the film on December 8 1952, with Janet Leigh reprising her role and Fernando Lamas replacing Pinza.[3]

See also

Notes

External links








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