Street Song (film) explained

Street Song
Director:Bernard Vorhaus
Producer:Julius Hagen
Starring:John Garrick
René Ray
Wally Patch
Music:W.L. Trytel
Cinematography:Walter Blakeley
Ernest Palmer
Editing:Michael C. Chorlton
Studio:Real Art Productions
Distributor:RKO Pictures
Runtime:64 minutes
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English

Street Song is a 1935 British musical film directed by Bernard Vorhaus and starring John Garrick, René Ray and Wally Patch.[1] [2]

Plot

Pet shop owner Lucy (René Ray) befriends Tom (John Garrick), a busker who is mixed up with criminals. Lucy hopes to help him by getting him a singing job on the radio, while he tries to raise money to prevent her from being evicted, but any such hopes evaporate when Tom is arrested for robbery. Lucy's young brother, Billy (John Singer), comes to their aid by inadvertently prompting the real robber (Wally Patch) to confess, and Tom is freed to pursue his singing career.

Cast

References

  1. Wood p.84
  2. Web site: Street Song (1935). https://web.archive.org/web/20180217084214/http://www.bfi.org.uk/films-tv-people/4ce2b6b6d2add. dead. 17 February 2018.

Bibliography