Cross My Heart (1946 film) explained

Cross My Heart
Director:John Berry
Producer:Harry Tugend
Starring:Betty Hutton
Sonny Tufts
Rhys Williams
Ruth Donnelly
Cinematography:Charles Lang
Stuart Thompson
Editing:Ellsworth Hoagland
Music:Robert Emmett Dolan
Studio:Paramount Pictures
Distributor:Paramount Pictures
Runtime:85 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Cross My Heart is a 1946 American comedy film directed by John Berry and starring Betty Hutton, Sonny Tufts and Rhys Williams. It was a remake of the 1937 film True Confession, which was itself based on the 1934 French play Mon Crime written by Georges Berr and Louis Verneuil.[1]

Plot

A chorus girl by the name of Peggy Harper quits her job as a chorus girl to get a daytime job to see her lawyer boyfriend Oliver Clark more often. She gets a job as a private secretary for a Mr. Wallace Brent.

One day at the office, he keeps pawing Peggy and trying to "neck" with her, and so she flees the office, all to come back the same night to get her coat, purse, and hat, and also run into the police. Peggy Harper is accused of murdering her boss. She confesses just so she can get Oliver to be her lawyer and defend her at the jury to showcase his talent.

Cast

References

  1. Kabatchnik p.182

Bibliography