A Dangerous Woman (1929 film) explained

A Dangerous Woman
Director:Gerald Grove
Rowland V. Lee
Screenplay:John Farrow
Edward E. Paramore Jr.
Starring:Baclanova
Clive Brook
Distributor:Paramount Pictures
Runtime:80 min
Country:United States
Language:english

A Dangerous Woman is a 1929 American Pre-Code film released by Paramount, based on the Margery Lawrence story, A Woman Who Needed Killing. It was directed by Gerald Grove and Rowland V. Lee from a script by John Farrow and Edward E. Paramore Jr.[1] [2]

Plot

Olga Baclanova (billed as Baclanova) stars as Tania Gregory and Clive Brook plays her husband Frank Gregory. The film is set at an outpost in British East Africa.[3]

Cast

See also

Notes and References

  1. Staff report (May 14, 1929). Grauman Will Introduce New Color-Talkie. Los Angeles Times
  2. Hall, Mordaunt (May 20, 1929). The Sbreen; The Five Who Fell. A Russian Vampire. Stagey Bits In This Film. "Eleven Who Were Loyal" a Picture With Mary Nolan. A Movie Filmed In Tripoli; "Kif Tebbi" Is A Commendable Picture Subsidized by Mussolini. Other Photoplays. The New York Times
  3. Busby, Marquis (May 18, 1929). Drama of Africa at Paramount. "Dangerous Woman" Tells Tense Story of Existence at Outposts. Los Angeles Times