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The Laughing Lady (1946)

User reviews

The Laughing Lady

8 reviews
5/10

OK,if you like this sort of thing

British National who mainly made cheaply made programmers really decided to push the boat out with this film which they made in Technicolour.Probably an attempt to challenge Gainsboroughs lead in costume films.It stars Webster Booth and Ann Ziegler,an English equivalent to the Macdonalld-Eddy partnership.However in America these sort of films seemed to have had their heyday.It is therefore difficult to know why this film was made at this time.It is a light operetta based at the Royal Pavilion in Brighton.Curiously the Prince of Wales is played by a slim Peter Graves rather than the virulent Francis L Sullivan.Sullivan gambles more than he owns and tries to get his daughter to marry Summer who will in consideration pay off his gambling debt.However to nobody's surprise she is in love with Booth.At lots of times the couple burst into song.The Technicolour on the copy I viewed was pretty bad.Michael Been fine appears briefly in a gambling scene.
  • malcolmgsw
  • Oct 6, 2016
  • Permalink
7/10

The conventions of romantic operetta now seem rather dated, even quaint.

  • JohnHowardReid
  • Apr 30, 2018
  • Permalink
4/10

British National's Only Technicolor Production

The second of two ruinously boring and expensive British Technicolor musicals showcasing stars from other media that hit screens in 1946 (the former being 'London Town' with Sid Field). Both abruptly ended burgeoning screen careers and complemented their use of colour onscreen by spraying ledgers with red ink. (Within two years British National had gone into receivership.)

Anne Ziegler looks good in Technicolor in the title role but husband Webster Booth is wisely heard rather than seen most of the time.
  • richardchatten
  • Jul 7, 2020
  • Permalink

British musical costume drama.

This passable British costume romance takes us to the wake of the French revolution, where La Canaille are busily putting an Aristo countess on trial. Robespierre / Goldner sends her son as a highwayman to England, to hold up the always excellent Sullivan and the man's daughter Ziegler, who is destined for the Prince of Wales' clutches, while they finalize Brighton Pier.

The middle aged working class leads just about get away with the dialogue ("What brutes are all of you men") and unsynchronised numbers about magical moonlight. The character actors and good costumes are a help to this old fashioned sub operetta.
  • Mozjoukine
  • Nov 15, 2013
  • Permalink
3/10

Mediocre.

Quaint costume drama that has not aged well. Insipid lead actor certainly not helping. A bit of French Revolution, a touch of Highway Robbery and a giant blob of English Royal Court drama.is a messy stew and then they start singing!
  • David-Grant
  • Jun 26, 2021
  • Permalink
4/10

When music adds nothing but unintentional giggles, it's time to just go back to straight drama.

  • mark.waltz
  • Aug 9, 2024
  • Permalink
8/10

Booth and Ziegler showpiece!

Lovely Anne and Webster as an improbable pair in a silly plot about the French Revolution. Good long shot filming allowing for full body language acting instead of the later years tight close ups on faces. Music score constantly seems about to break into Gianinna Mia but its very watchable!
  • rxelex
  • Jul 7, 2020
  • Permalink
9/10

A vehicle for Anne Ziegler and Webster Booth in 1946.

Anne Ziegler and Webster Booth had appeared in other films before this one but usually as guest artists. This was the first film where they had starring roles. I have read the other rather scathing reviews here. I'm afraid Anne Ziegler must be turning in her grave to hear herself described as "working class" by one reviewer.

Very little was said about the singing and the music in this film I thought it was very well done and although the whole thing might appear to be dated by now - after all, it was made in 1946 - I enjoyed it.
  • collenjm
  • Apr 1, 2022
  • Permalink

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