Uneasy Virtue
1931 film
- 5 February 1931 (1931-02-05)
Running time
Uneasy Virtue is a 1931 British comedy film directed by Norman Walker and starring Fay Compton, Edmund Breon, Francis Lister, Donald Calthrop, and Garry Marsh.[1] It was produced by British International Pictures and shot at the company's Elstree Studios. The film was based on the 1927 West End play The Happy Husband by Harrison Owen.
Synopsis
A loyal wife cultivates the impression that she has affairs with a variety of other men.
Cast
- Fay Compton as Dorothy Rendell
- Edmund Breon as Harvey Townsend
- Francis Lister as Bill Rendell
- Margot Grahame as Stella Tolhurst
- Donald Calthrop as Burglar
- Garry Marsh as Arthur Tolhurst
- Dodo Watts as Sylvia Fullerton
- Adele Dixon as Consuelo Pratt
- Hubert Harben as Frank K. Pratt
- Gerard Lyley as Sosso Stephens
- Margaret Yarde as Mrs Robinson
- Molly Lamont as Ada
References
- ^ BFI Database entry
Bibliography
- Low, Rachael. Filmmaking in 1930s Britain. George Allen & Unwin, 1985.
- Wood, Linda. British Films, 1927-1939. British Film Institute, 1986.
External links
- Uneasy Virtue at IMDb
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The films of Norman Walker
- Tommy Atkins (1928)
- Widecombe Fair (1928)
- A Romance of Seville (1929)
- The Hate Ship (1929)
- Loose Ends (1930)
- The Middle Watch (1930)
- Uneasy Virtue (1931)
- The Shadow Between (1931)
- Mr. Bill the Conqueror (1932)
- Fires of Fate (1932)
- The Fortunate Fool (1933)
- Forging Ahead (1933)
- The Flaw (1933)
- The House of Trent (1933)
- The Way of Youth (1934)
- Lilies of the Field (1934)
- Dangerous Ground (1934)
- Turn of the Tide (1935)
- Key to Harmony (1935)
- Debt of Honour (1936)
- Our Fighting Navy (1937)
- Sunset in Vienna (1937)
- The Man at the Gate (1941)
- Hard Steel (1942)
- The Great Mr. Handel (1942)
- They Knew Mr. Knight (1946)
- John Wesley (1954)
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