A Tailor Made Man is a 1931 American MGM pre-Code comedy film directed by Sam Wood. Adapted from the 1908 Hungarian play A Szerencse Fia by Gábor Drégely (staged in English in New York in 1917), the film stars William Haines and Dorothy Jordan.[1]
A Tailor Made Man | |
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Directed by | Sam Wood |
Written by | Gabor Dregely (novel) Harry James Smith (play) Edgar Allan Woolf (screenplay) |
Produced by | Harry Rapf |
Starring | William Haines Dorothy Jordan |
Cinematography | Alfred Gilks |
Edited by | George Hively |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release date |
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Running time | 79–80 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
On Broadway, Grant Mitchell starred in the 1917 production and a revival in 1929.[2] The play was the basis for a 1922 American silent film, A Tailor-Made Man.[citation needed]
Plot
editThis article needs a plot summary. (January 2024) |
Cast
edit- William Haines as John Paul Bart
- Dorothy Jordan as Tanya
- Joseph Cawthorn as Huber
- Marjorie Rambeau as Kitty Dupuy
- William Austin as Theodore Jellicott
- Ian Keith as Doctor Gustav von Sonntag
- Hedda Hopper as Mrs. Stanlaw
- Henry Armetta as Peter
- Walter Walker as Abraham Nathan
- Forrester Harvey as Arthur Pomeroy
- Joan Marsh as Bessie
- Martha Sleeper as Corrine
References
editExternal links
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