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Elstree Calling

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Cinematography
  
Claude Friese-Greene

Duration
  

Country
  
United Kingdom

6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Comedy, Musical

Elstree Calling movie poster

Cast
  
Anna May Wong
(Herself / Katherina in Taming of the Shrew),
Will Fyffe
(Himself),
Lily Morris
(Herself),
Gordon Begg
(Shakespeare),
Gordon Begg
(Himself)

Director
  
Alfred Hitchcock Andre Charlot Jack Hulbert Paul Murray

Writer
  
Adrian Brunel
,
Walter C. Mycroft
,
Val Valentine

Release date
  
1930

Directors
  
Alfred Hitchcock, Jack Hulbert, Andre Charlot

Genres
  
Comedy, Black-and-white, Musical, Musical comedy

Related Alfred Hitchcock movies
  
Alfred Hitchcock directed Elstree Calling and The Mountain Eagle, Alfred Hitchcock directed Elstree Calling and The Farmers Wife, Alfred Hitchcock directed Elstree Calling and Rich and Strange, Alfred Hitchcock directed Elstree Calling and The Manxman, Alfred Hitchcock directed Elstree Calling and Waltzes from Vienna

Elstree calling 1930 the charlot girls 1


Elstree Calling is a 1930 British film directed by Andre Charlot, Jack Hulbert, Paul Murray, and Alfred Hitchcock at Elstree Studios.

Contents

Teddy brown elstree calling 1930


Synopsis

The film, referred to as "A Cine-Radio Revue" in its original publicity, is a lavish musical film revue and was Britain's answer to the Hollywood revues which had been produced by the major studios in the United States, such as Paramount on Parade (1930) and Hollywood Revue of 1929. The revue has a slim storyline about it being a television broadcast. The film consists of 19 comedy and music vignettes linked by running jokes of an aspiring Shakespearean actor and technical problems with a viewer's TV set.

Hitchcock's contribution was the comic linking segments about a man trying to "tune in" the revue on his television set, but always failing to get the picture for long because of his needless tinkering. (In the UK, John Logie Baird's work in mechanical television in the 1920s made television a topical subject at the time.)

Production background

Imitating the lavish use of Technicolor by Hollywood studios at that time, two sequences in the film were artificially coloured by the Pathécolor process, which used stencils to tint selected areas of the black-and-white prints.

In their book Film's musical moment, Ian Conrich and Estella Tincknell write:

"The British equivalent of Hollywood's all-star revues was Elstree Calling (1930), produced by British International Pictures (BIP), which consisted mainly of musical and comedy items from stage shows of the day introduced by compère Tommy Handley. Lacking the lavish production values and visual spectacle of its Hollywood equivalents, Elstree Calling is now something of a curio item interesting chiefly for two reasons: Alfred Hitchcock (then contracted to BIP) was one of several directors employed on the production; and the film is quite possibly the first ever to refer directly to television (the linking narrative concerns a television broadcast of the revue, some six years before the BBC began regular television transmissions)."

Cast

  • Teddy Brown
  • Helen Burnell
  • Donald Calthrop
  • Bobbie Comber
  • Cicely Courtneidge
  • The 3 Eddies
  • Will Fyffe
  • Tommy Handley
  • Gordon Harker
  • Jack Hulbert
  • Hannah Jones
  • John Longden
  • Ivor McLaren
  • Lily Morris
  • Nathan Shacknovsky
  • John Stuart
  • Gordon Begg
  • Jameson Thomas
  • Anna May Wong
  • References

    Elstree Calling Wikipedia
    Elstree Calling IMDb Elstree Calling themoviedb.org