My Weakness | |
---|---|
Directed by | David Butler |
Written by | Buddy G. DeSylva Bert Hanlon David Butler |
Produced by | Buddy G. DeSylva |
Starring | Lilian Harvey Lew Ayres Charles Butterworth Harry Langdon |
Cinematography | Arthur C. Miller |
Edited by | Irene Morra |
Music by | Arthur Lange Cyril J. Mockridge |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Fox Film Corporation |
Release date | September 22, 1933 |
Running time | 73 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
My Weakness is a 1933 American pre-Code musical film directed by David Butler and starring Lilian Harvey, Lew Ayres and Charles Butterworth.[1] It was the second of four films made by the British-German actress Harvey in Hollywood, who had emerged as major star during Weimar Germany.
It both was and wasn't the first mainstream Hollywood film to use the word "gay" as a descriptor of homosexuality. In one scene, Charles Butterworth and Sid Silvers commiserate over their miserable, hopeless shared love for Lilian Harvey, until Butterworth is struck by a solution: "Let's be gay!" However, the Studio Relations Committee censors decreed that the line had to be muffled.[2]
Plot
A wealthy young man bets that he can turn a cleaning woman into a sophisticated lady and trick three men into wanting to marry her.
Cast
- Lilian Harvey as Looloo Blake
- Lew Ayres as Ronnie Gregory
- Charles Butterworth as Gerald Gregory
- Harry Langdon as Dan Cupid
- Sid Silvers as Maxie
- Irene Bentley as Jane Holman
- Henry Travers as Ellery Gregory
- Adrian Rosley as Baptiste
- Mary Howard as Diana Griffith
- Irene Ware as Eve Millstead
- Barbara Weeks as Lois Crowley
- Susan Fleming as Jacqueline Wood
- Marcelle Edwards as Marion
- Marjorie King as Lillian
- Jean Allen as Consuello
- Gladys Blake as Mitzi
- Dixie Francis as Dixie
References
Bibliography
- Solomon, Aubrey. The Fox Film Corporation, 1915-1935: A History and Filmography. McFarland, 2011.
External links
- My Weakness at IMDb