Sally (1929 film)

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Sally (1929)
Directed by John Francis Dillon
Written by Waldemar Young
A.P. Younger
based on the Broadway musical by Guy Bolton and P.G. Wodehouse
Starring Marilyn Miller
Alexander Gray
Music by Jerome Kern
Leonid S. Leonardi
Cinematography Devereaux Jennings
Charles Edgar Schoenbaum (Technicolor)
Editing by LeRoy Stone
Distributed by First National Pictures: A Subsidiary of Warner Bros.
Release date(s) December 23, 1929
Running time 103 min.
Country Flag of the United States United States
Language English
IMDb profile

Sally is the third sound feature photographed in Technicolor released in 1929 (the first was On with the Show 1929).

It was based on the Broadway stage hit, produced by Florenz Ziegfeld (which played at The New Amsterdam Theatre, from 12/21/1920 to 4/22/1922). Marilyn Miller, who had played the leading part in the Broadway production, was hired by the Warner Brothers at an extravagant sum (reportedly $1000 an hour for a total of $100,000) to star in the filmed version.[1] The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Art Direction in 1930.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Poster for the film.
Poster for the film.

Sally (Marilyn Miller) is an orphan who was named by the telephone exchange where she was abandoned as a baby. In the orphanage, she discovered the joy of dancing. Working as a waitress, she serves Blair (Alexander Gray), and they both fall for each other, but Blair is engaged to socialite Marcia. Sally is hired to impersonate a famous Russian dancer named Noskerova, but at that engagement, she is found to be a phoney. Undaunted, she proceeds with her life and has a show on Broadway, but she still thinks of Blair.

[edit] Preservation

Poster for the film.
Poster for the film.

The film survives only in black and white except for a brief color segment from the Wild Rose musical number which has been inserted into the print currently in circulation. Those frames which are missing in the color fragment, however, are presented in sepia toned black and white instead of being colorized to match.

[edit] Credited Cast


[edit] References

  1. ^ Photoplay, September 1929