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Paris (1929 film)

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Director
  
Clarence G. Badger

Producer
  
Ned Marin

Duration
  

Language
  
English

3.2/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Musical

Music director
  
Cole Porter, Edward Ward

Country
  
United States


Release date
  
November 7, 1929 (1929-11-07)

Writer
  
Martin Brown (musical play), E. Ray Goetz (musical play), Hope Loring (screenplay), Hope Loring (titles)

Cast
  
Irene Bordoni
,
Jack Buchanan
,
Louise Closser Hale
,
Jason Robards - Sr
,
ZaSu Pitts

Similar movies
  
Related Clarence G Badger movies

Paris is a 1929 American Pre-Code musical comedy, featuring Irene Bordoni. It was filmed with Technicolor sequences: four of ten reels were originally photographed in Technicolor.

Contents

Paris was the fourth color movie released by Warner Bros.; the first three were The Desert Song, On with the Show and Gold Diggers of Broadway, all released in 1929. (Song of the West was actually completed by June 1929 but had its release delayed until March 1930). The film was adapted from the Cole Porter Broadway musical of the same name. The musical was Porter's first Broadway hit. No film elements of Paris are known to exist, although the complete soundtrack survives on Vitaphone disks. The sound tape reels for this film survives at UCLA Film and Television Archive.

Paris was the fourth movie Warner Brothers had made with their Technicolor contract. The filmmakers used a color (Technicolor) process of red and green, at the time it was the third process of Technicolor.

Paris 1929 complete international vitaphone soundtrack part 1


Plot

Irene Bordoni is cast as Vivienne Rolland, a Parisian chorus girl in love with Massachusetts boy Andrew Sabbot (Jason Robards Sr.) Andrew's snobbish mother Cora (Louise Closser Hale) tries to break up the romance. Jack Buchanan likewise makes his talking-picture debut as Guy Pennell, the leading man in Vivienne's revue.

Cast

  • Irene Bordoni - Vivienne Rolland
  • Jack Buchanan - Guy Pennell
  • Louise Closser Hale - Cora Sabbot
  • Jason Robards - Andrew Sabbot
  • ZaSu Pitts - Harriet
  • Production

    Warner Bros. paid the celebrated French music hall star and Broadway chanteuse Irene Bordoni $10,000 a week to star in this film, playing the role she had originated on Broadway, introducing the enduring Porter standard "Let's Do It, Let's Fall in Love". While this film was being shot, the studio was in the process of completing their all-star revue The Show of Shows (1929), so they had Bordoni film a number for the revue. Their initial intention was to have Bordoni star in two musical features, but due to the poor box-office reception of Paris, they decided not to make any more films with her.

    Paris utilized advertisements of a type which were common for its time, featuring the talking in the film and Irene Bordoni starring. One ad for Paris said "See the talking picture of the future".

    References

    Paris (1929 film) Wikipedia
    Paris (1929 film) IMDb