Strange Suzy
Strange Suzy (French: L'étrange Suzy) is a 1941 French comedy film directed by Pierre-Jean Ducis and starring Suzy Prim, Claude Dauphin and Marguerite Moreno.[1]
Strange Suzy | |
---|---|
Directed by | Pierre-Jean Ducis |
Written by | Yves Mirande |
Starring | Suzy Prim Claude Dauphin Marguerite Moreno |
Music by | Vincent Scotto |
Cinematography | Fred Langenfeld Jacques Lemare |
Edited by | Andrée Danis |
Production company | Badalo Films |
Release date | 29 August 1941 |
Running time | 83 minutes |
Country | France |
Language | French |
Made in the southern zone of Vichy France, the film was a commercial success. Along with another hit The Well Digger's Daughter, it was banned by the Nazi authorities in the Occupied Zone in retaliaton for a Vichy ban on the German film Bel Ami.[2]
Cast
- Suzy Prim as Suzy
- Claude Dauphin as Jacques Hébert
- Marguerite Moreno as La tante
- Albert Préjean as Henri Berger
- Pierre Stéphen as Joseph
- Gaby André as Aline
- Fernand Charpin
- Marcel Delaître
- Lisette Didier
- Lysiane Rey
- Marthe Sarbel
- Jacques Tarride
References
- Burch & Sellier p.150
- Winkel & Welch p.142
Bibliography
- Noël Burch & Geneviève Sellier. The Battle of the Sexes in French Cinema, 1930–1956. Duke University Press, 2013.
- Winkel, Roel Vande & Welch, David. Cinema and the Swastika: The International Expansion of Third Reich Cinema. Palgrave MacMillan, 2011.
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