The Luck of the Irish (1948 film) explained

The Luck of the Irish
Director:Henry Koster
Producer:Fred Kohlmar
Music:Cyril Mockridge
Cinematography:Joseph LaShelle
Editing:J. Watson Webb Jr.
Studio:20th Century Fox
Distributor:20th Century Fox
Runtime:99 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

The Luck of the Irish is a 1948 American comedy film directed by Henry Koster, and starring Tyrone Power and Anne Baxter.[1] The film was based on the 1948 novel There Was a Little Man by Guy Pearce Jones and Constance Bridges Jones.

Plot

Stephen Fitzgerald, a newspaper reporter from New York, meets a leprechaun and beautiful young Nora, while traveling in Ireland. When he returns to his fiancée, Frances, and her wealthy father, David C. Augur, in the midst of a political campaign in New York, he finds that the leprechaun and the young woman are now in the big city as well. Stephen is torn between the wealth he might enjoy in New York or returning to his roots in Ireland.

Awards and nominations

Radio adaptation

The Luck of the Irish was presented on Lux Radio Theatre on CBS December 27, 1948. The adaptation starred Dana Andrews, Baxter, Kellaway, and Stanley Holloway.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: THE LUCK OF THE IRISH(1948) ALSO KNOWN AS: FOR FEAR OF LITTLE MEN / LEAVE IT TO THE IRISH / THAT OLD MAGIC / THE SHAMROCK TOUCH . Turner Classic Movies. tcm.com. 28 December 2015.
  2. Those Were the Days. Nostalgia Digest. Winter 2013. 39. 1. 32–41.