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The Talk of the Town ()


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An escaped prisoner has to prove his innocence to a stuffy law professor with the help of a spirited school teacher.

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Cast verified as complete

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Leopold Dilg
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Nora Shelley
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Professor Michael Lightcap
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Sam Yates
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Regina Bush
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Andrew Holmes
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Mrs. Shelley
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Tilney
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Jan Pulaski
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Clyde Bracken
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Police Chief
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
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Supreme Court Spectator (uncredited)
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Schoolgirl Noticing Beard (uncredited)
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Townswoman (uncredited)
Holger Bendixen ...
Townsman (uncredited)
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Western Union Boy (uncredited)
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Mrs. Pulaski (uncredited)
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Desk Sergeant (uncredited)
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Donald Forrester (uncredited)
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Secretary (uncredited)
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Reporter (uncredited)
Jack Carr ...
Usher (uncredited)
Eddie Coke ...
Reporter (uncredited)
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Nightclub Waiter (uncredited)
Joe Cunningham ...
McGuire (uncredited)
Lew Davis ...
Waiter at Regina's Shop (uncredited)
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Cop on Stairs (uncredited)
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Detective (uncredited)
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Senator James Boyd (uncredited)
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Townsman (uncredited)
Jack Gardner ...
Cameraman with Forrester (uncredited)
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Townsman (uncredited)
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Sheriff with Hounds (uncredited)
Jay Guedillio ...
Man (uncredited)
Dave Harper ...
Townsman (uncredited)
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Sergeant (uncredited)
Oscar 'Dutch' Hendrian ...
Mob Member Carrying Rope (uncredited)
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Townsman (uncredited)
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Vendor (uncredited)
Dick Jensen ...
Townsman (uncredited)
Robert Keats ...
Man (uncredited)
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Baseball Player (uncredited)
William Lally ...
Police Sergeant (uncredited)
Eddie Laughton ...
Henry, Photographer (uncredited)
Jack Low ...
Workman (uncredited)
Herman Marks ...
Townsman (uncredited)
Jewel McGowan ...
Lindy Dancer (uncredited)
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Jailer Overpowered by Dilg (uncredited)
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Nightclub Patron (uncredited)
Patrick McVey ...
First Policeman (uncredited)
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Townsman (uncredited)
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Supreme Court Doorkeeper (uncredited)
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Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)
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Supreme Court Spectator (uncredited)
Charles Perry ...
Townsman (uncredited)
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Eddie, Moving Man (uncredited)
Lee Phelps ...
Detective (uncredited)
Lee Prather ...
Sergeant At Arms (uncredited)
Al Rhein ...
Townsman (uncredited)
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Jake (uncredited)
Cy Schindell ...
Townsman at Ballgame (uncredited)
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Headwaiter at Nightclub (uncredited)
Jack Shea ...
Reporter (uncredited)
Roberta Smith ...
Schoolgirl Noticing Beard (uncredited)
Charles St. George ...
Townsman (uncredited)
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Policeman in Station Wagon (uncredited)
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District Attorney Scott (uncredited)
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Operator (uncredited)
Victor Travis ...
Townsman (uncredited)
Lelah Tyler ...
Townswoman (uncredited)
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Townsman at Ballgame (uncredited)
Ralph Volkie ...
Townsman (uncredited)
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Moving Man (uncredited)
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Deputy Sheriff (uncredited)
George Watts ...
Judge Grunstadt (uncredited)
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Hound Keeper (uncredited)

Directed by

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George Stevens

Written by

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Irwin Shaw ... (screen play) &
Sidney Buchman ... (screen play)
 
Dale Van Every ... (adaptation)
 
Sidney Harmon ... (based on a story by)

Produced by

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Fred Guiol ... associate producer
George Stevens ... producer

Music by

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Friedrich Hollaender ... (as Frederick Hollander)

Cinematography by

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Ted Tetzlaff ... director of photography

Editing by

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Otto Meyer

Editorial Department

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Paul Borofsky ... assistant editor (uncredited)

Art Direction by

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Lionel Banks

Makeup Department

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Rhoda Donaldson ... hair stylist (uncredited)
Fred B. Phillips ... makeup artist (uncredited)

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director

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Norman Deming ... assistant director
Earl Bellamy ... third assistant director (uncredited)
Bud Brill ... second assistant director (uncredited)

Art Department

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Rudolph Sternad ... associate art director
Fay Babcock ... set dresser (uncredited)
Bill Black ... props (uncredited)
H. Hopkins ... props (uncredited)
Reggie Smith ... props (uncredited)

Sound Department

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Eldon Coutts ... sound engineer (uncredited)
Lodge Cunningham ... sound (uncredited)

Stunts

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William Lally ... stunts (uncredited)
Cy Schindell ... stunts (uncredited)
Paul Stader ... stunt double: Cary Grant (uncredited)

Camera and Electrical Department

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Fayte M. Browne ... second camera operator (uncredited)
M.S. Burns ... gaffer (uncredited)
Joe Citron ... assistant camera (uncredited)
Walter Meins ... grip (uncredited)
John Miehle ... still photographer (uncredited)
Sam Rosen ... assistant camera (uncredited)
Fred Stoll ... grip (uncredited)

Costume and Wardrobe Department

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Irene ... gowns for Miss Arthur
Tom Dawson ... wardrobe: men (uncredited)
Gail Ducharme ... wardrobe: women (uncredited)
Eugene Joseff ... costume jeweller (uncredited)

Music Department

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Morris Stoloff ... musical director (as M.W. Stoloff)
Daniele Amfitheatrof ... composer: additional music (uncredited)
Sidney Cutner ... orchestrator (uncredited)

Additional Crew

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Donald W. Starling ... montage effects (as Donald Starling)
Steve Benton ... stand-in: Edgar Buchanan (uncredited)
Dorothy Dunn ... stand-in: Emma Dunn (uncredited)
Mrs. Roy Feldman ... stand-in: Ferike Boros (uncredited)
Ruth Feldman ... stand-in: Ferike Boros (uncredited)
Jack Mannick ... stand-in: Leonid Kinskey (uncredited)
Mal Merrihugh ... stand-in: Cary Grant (uncredited)
Buddy Roosevelt ... stand-in: Ronald Colman (uncredited)
Floyd Shackelford ... stand-in: Rex Ingram (uncredited)
Kay Smith ... stand-in: Jean Arthur (uncredited)
Ralph Stein ... stand-in: George Watts (uncredited)
Frances Waverly ... stand-in: Glenda Farrell (uncredited)
Crew verified as complete

Production Companies

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Distributors

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Special Effects

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Other Companies

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Storyline

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Plot Summary

In suburban Lochester, New England, three people end up living together in high-school teacher Nora Shelley's rental house. The first is her new tenant, renowned Harvard law professor Michael Lightcap, who has rented the house for the summer while he writes his new book. The second is Nora herself. Despite having an auspicious first meeting, Lightcap hires Nora to be his live-in cook and secretary for a week until his manservant Tilney arrives. The third is Joseph, the property's gardener, who is currently laid up with a sprained ankle. In reality, Joseph is Nora's childhood friend Leopold Dilg, who has just escaped from prison. Leopold was being tried for the arson of the factory where he worked, and for murder for the death of the factory foreman Clyde Bracken, whose body was never recovered but who is assumed to have died in the fire. Despite the danger to herself, Nora hides Leopold since she believes his story that although he, as an activist, did speak out about the dangerous conditions at the factory, he did not set the fire, which he assumes was done by the factory's owner, Andrew Holmes, to collect the insurance money, all the while having Leopold as a scapegoat. Nora campaigned to get the job with Lightcap if only to be able to better hide Leopold in the house. Leopold escaped if only because he knew he would not get a fair trial due to the rabble rousing being conducted by Holmes against him. Lightcap and who he knows as Joseph end up getting along famously, although activist Leopold believes Lightcap's view of the law is too clinical for him truly to be a great lawyer or great judge, those thoughts arising if only because Nora and Leopold learn clandestinely that Lightcap is being appointed to the Supreme Court. Nora, Leopold and Leopold's lawyer, Sam Yates, try to get Lightcap involved in helping Leopold by showing him that Leopold indeed will not get a fair trial. In the process, Lightcap may in turn show Leopold and Nora that his current way of thinking has much merit. Written by Huggo

Plot Keywords
Taglines Comedy so gay...drama so thrilling...love so exciting...it will be the talk of OUR town! (print ad - Lubbock Avalanche Journal - Lindsey Theatre - Lubbock, Texas - October 4, 1942) See more »
Genres
Parents Guide View content advisory »
Certification

Additional Details

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Also Known As
  • Three's a Crowd (United States)
  • George Stevens' The Talk of the Town (United States)
  • Justice Winks an Eye (United States)
  • The Gentleman Misbehaves (United States)
  • Mister Twilight (United States)
  • See more »
Runtime
  • 118 min
Country
Language
Color
Aspect Ratio
Sound Mix
Filming Locations

Box Office

Budget $1,000,000 (estimated)

Did You Know?

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Trivia When the professor is unconscious on the floor, Tilney (Rex Ingram) asks Sam if he is a doctor. Ironically, Rex Ingram was himself a trained physician in real life. See more »
Goofs Following a torrential nighttime rainstorm, the dirt driveway and surrounding earth around the house are perfectly dry early the next morning. See more »
Movie Connections Featured in The Lady with the Torch (1999). See more »
Soundtracks Jive Bomber See more »
Quotes Michael Lightcap: This is your law and your finest possession - it makes you free men in a free country. Why have you come here to destroy it? If you know what's good for you, take those weapons home and burn them! And then think... think of this country and of the law that makes it what it is. Think of a world crying for this very law! And maybe you'll understand why you ought to guard it. Why the law has got to be the personal concern of every citizen. To uphold it for your neighbor as well as yourself. Violence against it is one mistake. Another mistake is for any man to look upon the law as just a set of principles. And just so much language printed on fine, heavy paper. Something he recites and then leans back and takes it for granted that justice is automatically being done. Both kinds of men are equally wrong! The law must be engraved in our hearts and practiced every minute to the letter and spirit. It can't even exist unless we're willing to go down into the dust and blood and fight a battle every day of our lives to preserve it. For our neighbor as well as ourself!
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