We'll Smile Again
We'll Smile Again | |
---|---|
Directed by | John Baxter |
Produced by | John Baxter |
Written by |
Barbara K. Emary Bud Flanagan Austin Melford |
Starring |
Bud Flanagan Chesney Allen Meinhart Maur |
Music by | Kennedy Russell |
Cinematography | James Wilson |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Anglo-American Film Corporation |
Release dates | 7 December 1942 |
Running time | 93 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
We'll Smile Again is a 1942 British musical comedy film, directed by John Baxter, and starring Bud Flanagan, Chesney Allen and Meinhart Maur.[1] A ring of Nazi spies infiltrate a film studio planning to use it for sending coded messages, but they are foiled by two of the low-level staff at the studio.
Cast
- Bud Flanagan as Bob Parker
- Chesney Allen as Gordon Maxwell
- Meinhart Maur as Herr Steiner
- Phyllis Stanley as Gina Cavendish
- Gordon McLeod as MacNaughton
- Alexander Kardan as Holtzman
- Peggy Dexter as Googie
- Horace Kenney as George
- Julian Vedey as Hoffman
- Charles Austin as Butler
- Edgar Driver as Porter
- Wally Patch as Head Porter
- C. Denier Warren as Waiter
- Gwen Catley as Herself, Soprano
- Billy Mayerl as Himself, Pianist
- Henry Hilliard as Dress Designer
- Robert Brooks Turner as Policeman
- Nuala Barrie as Councillor's Daughter
- Trevor Denis as Assistant Director
- Charles Doe as Cloakroom Attendant
- Mary Eaton as Continuity Girl
- Hal Gordon as Customer
- Harry Herbert as Brewery Gateman
- Gerhard Kempinski as Colonel Roca
- Joe E. Lee as Ginsburg
- Patrick Ludlow as BBC Man
- Ruth Maitland as Woman in Queue
- Andreas Malandrinos as Waiter
- Malcolm 'Mr. Jetsam' McEachern as Himself - Singer
- George Merritt
- Ernest Metcalfe as Assistant Make-Up
- Peter Newman as Second Assistant Director
- Hilde Palmer as Chorus Girl
- Stan Paskin as Man in Queue
- Ethel Royale as Lady Councillor
- Cyril Smith as Assistant Cutter
- Billy Wells as Publican
- Ben Williams as Cameraman
References
- ↑ "BFI | Film & TV Database | WE'LL SMILE AGAIN (1942)". Ftvdb.bfi.org.uk. 2009-04-16. Retrieved 2012-03-14.
External links
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