Married Before Breakfast Explained

Married Before Breakfast
Director:Edwin L. Marin
Producer:Sam Zimbalist
Music:David Snell
Cinematography:Leonard Smith
Editing:William S. Gray
Studio:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Distributor:Loew's Inc.
Runtime:71 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English
Budget:$200,000[1]
Gross:$448,000

Married Before Breakfast is a 1937 American romantic comedy film directed by Edwin L. Marin and starring Robert Young, Florence Rice and June Clayworth.

Plot

After years of struggling, inventor Tom Wakefield sells his hair-removal invention for a quarter of a million dollars. He immediately goes on a spending spree, doing good deeds for friends and strangers alike, worrying June Baylin, his fiancée.

Kitty Brent helps him with some steamship tickets, so Tom wants to do something nice in return. Kitty says her marriage to fiancé Kenneth is on hold until he can sell an insurance policy to a milkman named Baglipp. An overly optimistic Tom assures her she'll be married by the next morning. His schemes to make Baglipp take the policy ends up getting Tom and Kitty into all kinds of trouble, including involvement with a robbery.

By morning, both their sweethearts are exasperated. June breaks off her engagement with Tom, who realizes that overnight he's fallen for Kitty. As soon as she begins feeling the same way, Tom assures her that she might end up married this very day.

Cast

Reception

According to MGM records the movie earned $319,000 in the US and Canada and $129,000 elsewhere, resulting in a profit of $90,000.[1]

External links

Notes and References

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