The Trojan Brothers | |
---|---|
Directed by | Maclean Rogers |
Written by | Irwin Reiner Maclean Rogers |
Based on | The Trojan Brothers by Pamela Hansford Johnson |
Produced by | Louis H. Jackson |
Starring | Patricia Burke David Farrar Bobby Howes |
Cinematography | Moray Grant Ernest Palmer |
Edited by | Paul Capon |
Music by | Hans May |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Anglo-American Film Corporation |
Release date |
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Running time | 85 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
The Trojan Brothers is a 1946 British comedy film directed by Maclean Rogers and starring Patricia Burke, David Farrar and Bobby Howes. [1] It is an adaptation of the 1944 novel of the same title by Pamela Hansford Johnson.
The two halves of a London music hall act performing together as a pantomime horse have a sharp falling out when one of them begins a relationship with an attractive society woman.
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Lisbon Story is a 1946 British musical thriller film directed by Paul L. Stein and starring Patricia Burke, David Farrar, Walter Rilla and Austin Trevor. It was based on the musical The Lisbon Story by Harold Purcell and Harry Parr Davies that ran at The Hippodrome in 1943. The screenplay concerns a cabaret singer and a British intelligence officer who travel to Berlin to rescue an atomic scientist being held there.
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The Trojan Brothers is a 1944 comedy novel by the British writer Pamela Hansford Johnson. In 1920s London two music hall performers whose act involves them dressing as the respective ends of a pantomime horse have a falling out when one of them falls for an attractive society lady.