Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
It was Dean Martin Show producer-director Greg Garrison who hatched the notion of a series with a nostalgic 1930s motif, and Dean Martin Show music director Lee Hale who, inspired by the chorus line dancers known as "The Gold Diggers" featured in the Busby Berkeley and Warner Bros. films of the 1930s and 1940s, thought of the name The ...
The Gold Diggers is a play written by Avery Hopwood. It popularized the use of the term "gold digger" to refer to hypergamistic women who seek wealthy partners, as opposed to the earlier usage referring to gold miners. Producer David Belasco staged it on Broadway in 1919, with Ina Claire in the lead role. It was a hit, running for two ...
Gold Diggers of 1933 was originally to be called High Life, and George Brent was an early casting idea for the role played by Warren William. Early drafts of the screenplay focused on the sensual elements of the story, and subsequent drafts gradually began adding more of the narrative taking place behind the scenes of the show.
The Gold Digger (Judge, 24 July 1920) Lobby card for Gold Diggers of Broadway (1929), an example of a film which helped create the American public association of chorus girls with gold diggers. A gold digger is a person, typically a woman, who engages in a type of transactional sexual relationship for money rather than love. [1]
The Gold Diggers is a Warner Bros. silent comedy film directed by Harry Beaumont with screenplay by Grant Carpenter [2] based on the play The Gold Diggers by Avery Hopwood which ran for 282 performances on Broadway in 1919 and 1920. Both the play and the film were produced by David Belasco.
Gold Diggers of 1933 (1933, based on The Gold Diggers) Night of the Garter (UK, 1933, based on Getting Gertie's Garter) The Model Husband (Germany, 1937, based on Fair and Warmer) Unsere kleine Frau (Germany, 1938, based on Our Little Wife) Mia moglie si diverte (Italy, 1938, based on Our Little Wife) Gröna hissen (Sweden, 1944, based on Fair ...
Gold Diggers in Paris was the fifth and last in Warner Bros.' series of "Gold Digger" films, following Gold Diggers of Broadway (1929), which is now lost; Gold Diggers of 1933, which was a remake of the earlier film, and the first to feature Busby Berkeley's extravagant production numbers; Gold Diggers of 1935; and Gold Diggers of 1937. [3]
They and a trio of disaffected ninjas formed a pirate band to earn back the lost gold and get vengeance on Lowtor. McMorgan captains the Gaollion, a four-mode robot designed by O’Mommah. O’Mommah: Elder daughter of the Leprechauns’ King Shamus, O’Mommah is a brilliant technomagical engineer.