Authors: Gabriel Miller
Glamour
(1934)
Universal
Director: William Wyler
Adaptation: Doris Anderson, based on the short story by Edna Ferber
Continuity: Gladys Unger
Photography: George Robinson
Editor: Ted Kent
Art direction: Charles D. Hall
Musical score: Howard Jackson and Roy Turk
Cast: Paul Lukas (Victor Banki), Constance Cummings (Linda Faye), Phillip Reed (Lorenzo Valenti), Joseph Cawthorn (Ibsen), Doris Lloyd (Nana), Lyman Williams (Forsyth), David Dickinson (Stevie), Peggy Campbell (Amy), Olaf Hytten (Dobbs), Alice Lake (Secretary), Lita Chevret (Grassie), Phil Tead (Jimmy)
74 minutes
The Good Fairy
(1935)
Universal
Producer: Carl Laemmle Jr.
Director: William Wyler
Associate producer: Henry Henigson
Screenplay: Preston Sturges, based on the play by Ferenc Molnár as translated by Jane Hinton
Photography: Norbert Brodine
Editorial supervision: Maurice Pivar
Editor: Daniel Mandell
Art direction: Charles D. Hall
Costumes: Vera West
Music director: Heinz Roemheld
Sound supervision: Gilbert Kurland
Cast: Margaret Sullavan (Luisa Ginglebusher), Herbert Marshall (Dr. Max Sporum), Frank Morgan (Konrad), Reginald Owen (Detlaff), Alan Hale (Schlapkohl), Beulah Bondi (Dr. Schultz), Cesar Romero (Joe), Eric Blore (Dr. Metz), Al Bridges (Doorman), June Clayworth (Actress), George Davis (Chauffeur), Hugh O'Connell (Gas Collector)
98 minutes
The Gay Deception
(1935)
Twentieth CenturyâFox
Producer: Jesse L. Lasky
Director: William Wyler
Screenplay: Stephen Avery and Don Hartman
Additional dialogue: Arthur Richman (and Sam Raphaelson, uncredited)
Photography: Joseph Valentine
Art direction: Max Parker
Costumes: William Lambert
Music: Louis de Francesco
Sound: A. von Kirbach
Assistant director: A. Schaumer
Cast: Francis Lederer (Sandro), Frances Dee (Mirabel), Benita Hume (Miss Channing), Alan Mowbray (Lord Clewe), Paul Hurst (Bell Captain), Ferdinand Gottschalk (Squires), Richard Carle (Spitzer), Lenita Lane (Peg DeForrest), Lennox Pawel (Consul-General), Adele St. Maur (Lucille, the Maid), Lionel Stander (Gettel), Akim Tamiroff (Spellek), Barbara Fritchie (Joan Dennison)
Distribution: United Artists
79 minutes
These Three
(1936)
Samuel Goldwyn Production
Producer: Samuel Goldwyn
Director: William Wyler
Screenplay: Lillian Hellman, based on her play
The Children's Hour
Photography: Gregg Toland
Editor: Daniel Mandell
Art direction: Richard Day
Costumes: Omar Kiam
Music: Alfred Newman
Assistant director: Walter Mayo
Sound recorder: Frank Maher
Cast: Miriam Hopkins (Martha Dobie), Merle Oberon (Karen Wright), Joel McCrea (Dr. Joseph Cardin), Catherine Doucet (Mrs. Lily Mortar), Alma Kruger (Mrs. Tilford), Bonita Granville (Mary Tilford), Marcia Mae Jones (Rosalie Wells), Carmencita Johnson (Evelyn), Margaret Hamilton (Agatha), Marie Louise Cooper (Helen Burton), Mary Ann Durkin (Joyce Walton), Walter Brennan (Taxi Driver)
Distribution: United Artists
93 minutes
Dodsworth
(1936)
Samuel Goldwyn Production
Producer: Samuel Goldwyn
Director: William Wyler
Associate producer: Merritt Hulburd
Screenplay: Sidney Howard, based on the novel by Sinclair Lewis and on the play adapted by Sidney Howard as produced for the stage by Max Gordon
Photography: Rudolph Maté
Editor: Daniel Mandell
Art direction: Richard Day
Costumes: Omar Kiam
Music: Alfred Newman
Assistant director: Eddie Bernoudy
Sound: Oscar Lagerstrom
Location cameraman: Harry Perry
Cast: Walter Huston (Sam Dodsworth), Ruth Chatterton (Fran Dodsworth), Paul Lukas (Arnold Iselin), Mary Astor (Edith Cortwright), David Niven (Major Clyde Lockert), Gregory Gaye (Kurt von Obersdorf), Maria Ouspenskaya (Baroness von Obersdorf), Odette Myrtil (Mme. Renée de Penable), Kathryn Marlowe (Emily), John Payne (Harry McKee), Spring Byington (Matey Pearson), Harlan Briggs (Tubby Pearson), Charles Halton (Hazzard), Beatrice Maud (Mary, the Dodsworths' Maid), Wilson Benge (Steward), Inez Palange (Teresa)
Distribution: United Artists
101 minutes
Come and Get It
(1936)
Samuel Goldwyn Production
Directors: Howard Hawks and William Wyler
Associate producer: Merritt Hulburd
Logging scenes directed by: Richard Rosson
Screenplay: Jules Furthman and Jane Murfin, based on the novel by Edna Ferber
Photography: Gregg Toland and Rudolph Maté
Editor: Edward Curtiss
Art direction: Richard Day
Set decoration: Julia Heron
Costumes: Omar Kiam
Music: Alfred Newman
Assistant director: Walter Mayo
Sound technician: Frank Maher
Cast: Edward Arnold (Barney Glasgow), Joel McCrea (Richard Glasgow), Frances Farmer (Lotta Morgan/Lotta Bostrom), Walter Brennan (Swan Bostrom), Andrea Leeds (Evie Glasgow), Frank Shields (Tony Schwerke), Mady Christians (Karie), Mary Nash (Emma Louise Glasgow), Clem Bevans (Gunar Gallagher), Edwin Maxwell (Sid Le Maire), Cecil Cunningham (Josie), Harry Bradley (Gubbins), Rollo Lloyd (Steward), Charles Halton (Hewitt), Phillip Cooper (Chore Boy), Al K. Hall (Goodnow), Robert Lowery (Young Man), Jack Pennick (Foreman), Stanley Blystone, Constantine Romanoff, Harry Tenbrook, Max Wagner (Lumberjacks)
Distribution: United Artists
105 minutes
Dead End
(1937)
Samuel Goldwyn Production
Producer: Samuel Goldwyn
Director: William Wyler
Associate producer: Merritt Hulburd
Screenplay: Lillian Hellman, based on the play by Sidney Kingsley as produced by Norman Bel Geddes
Photography: Gregg Toland
Editor: Daniel Mandell
Art direction: Richard Day
Set decoration: Julia Heron
Costumes: Omar Kiam
Music: Alfred Newman
Assistant director: Eddie Bernoudy
Sound recorder: Frank Maher
Dialogue director: Edward P. Goodnow
Cast: Sylvia Sidney (Drina Gordon), Joel McCrea (Dave Connell), Humphrey Bogart (“Baby Face” Martin), Wendy Barrie (Kay Burton), Claire Trevor (Francey), Allen Jenkins (Hunk), Marjorie Main (Mrs. Martin), Billy Halop (Tommy Gordon), Huntz Hall (Dippy), Bobby Jordan (Angel), Leo Gorcey (Spit), Gabriel Dell (T.B.), Bernard Punsley (Milty), Charles Peck (Philip Griswold), Minor Watson (Mr. Griswold), James Burke (Mulligan), Ward Bond (Doorman), Elisabeth Risdon (Mrs. Connell), Esther Dale (Mrs. Fenner), George Humbert (Mr. Pascalgi), Marcelle Corday (Governess), Charles Halton (Whitey), Donald Barry (Intern)
Distribution: United Artists
93 minutes
Jezebel
(1938)
Warner Brothers
Executive producer: Hal B. Wallis
Director: William Wyler
Associate producer: Henry Blanke
Screenplay: Clements Ripley, Abem Finkel, and John Huston, based on the play by Owen Davis Sr.
Script contributor: Robert Buckner
Photography: Ernest Haller
Editor: Warren Low
Art direction: Robert Haas
Costumes: Orry-Kelly
Music: Max Steiner
Musical direction: Leo F. Forbstein
Songs: “Jezebel” by Johnny Mercer and Harry Warren; “Raise a Ruckus” by Harry Warren and Al Dubin
Technical adviser: Dalton S. Reymond
Assistant director: Bob Ross
Sound: Robert B. Lee
Cast: Bette Davis (Julie Marsden), Henry Fonda (Preston Dillard), George Brent (Buck Cantrell), Margaret Lindsay (Amy), Donald Crisp (Dr. Livingston), Fay Bainter (Aunt Belle), Richard Cromwell (Ted Dillard), Henry O'Neill (General Bogardus), Spring Byington (Mrs. Kendrick), John Litel (Jean La Cour), Gordon Oliver (Dick Allen), Janet Shaw (Molly Allen), Theresa Harris (Zette), Margaret Early (Stephanie Kendrick), Irving Pichel (Huger), Eddie Anderson (Gros Bat), Stymie Beard (Ti Bat), Lew Payton (Uncle Cato), George Renevant (De Lautruc), Georgia Caine (Mrs. Petion), Fred Lawrence (Bob), Ann Codee (Madam Pulard, Dressmaker), Daisy Bufford (Flower Girl), Trevor Bardette (Sheriff at Plantation), Jack Norton (Drunk), Jacques Vanaire (Duretta), Alan Bridge (New Orleans Sheriff)
Distribution: Warner Brothers
104 minutes
Wuthering Heights
(1939)
Samuel Goldwyn Production
Producer: Samuel Goldwyn
Director: William Wyler
Screenplay: Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur, from the novel by Emily Brontë
Photography: Gregg Toland
Editor: Daniel Mandell
Art direction: James Basevi
Set decoration: Julia Heron
Costumes: Omar Kiam
Music: Alfred Newman
Technical adviser: Peter Shaw
Assistant director: Walter Mayo
Sound recorder: Paul Neal
Cast: Merle Oberon (Cathy), Laurence Olivier (Heathcliff), David Niven (Edgar Linton), Flora Robson (Ellen Dean), Donald Crisp (Dr. Kenneth), Hugh Williams (Hindley), Geraldine Fitzgerald (Isabella Linton), Leo G. Carroll (Joseph), Cecil Humphreys (Judge Linton), Miles Mander (Lockwood), Romaine Callender (Robert, the Butler), Cecil Kellaway (Earnshaw), Rex Downing (Heathcliff as a Child), Sarita Wooton (Cathy as a Child), Douglas Scott (Hindley as a Child), Helena Grant (Miss Hudkins), Susanne Leach (Guest), Tommy Martin and Schuyler Standish (Little Boys), Diane Williams (Little Girl), Mme. Alice Ahlers (Harpsichordist), Vernon Downing (Giles)
Distribution: United Artists
103 minutes
The Westerner
(1940)
Samuel Goldwyn Production
Director: William Wyler
Screenplay: Jo Swerling and Niven Busch, based on a story by Stuart N. Lake
Photography: Gregg Toland
Editor: Daniel Mandell
Art direction: James Basevi
Set decoration: Julia Heron
Costumes: Irene Saltern
Music: composed and conducted by Dmitri Tiomkin (Alfred Newman, uncredited)
Assistant director: Walter Mayo
Cast: Gary Cooper (Cole Hardin), Walter Brennan (Judge Roy Bean), Doris Davenport (Jane-Ellen Mathews), Fred Stone (Caliphet Mathews), Forrest Tucker (Wade Harper), Lilian Bond (Lillie Langtry), Paul Hurst (Chickenfoot), Chill Wills (Southeast), Charles Halton (Mort Borrow), Tom Tyler (King Evans), Arthur Aylsworth (Mr. Dixon), Lupita Toyer (Teresita), Julian Rivero (Juan Gomez), Dana Andrews (Bart Cobble), Roger Gray (Eph Stringer), Trevor Bardette (Shad Wilkins), Jack Pennick (Bantry), Arthur Mix (Seth Tucker), Helen Foster (Janice), Connie Leon (Langtry's Maid), Charles Coleman (Langtry's Manager), Lew Kelly (Ticket Man), Heinie Conklin (Man at Window), Lucien Littlefield (Stranger), Corbet Morris (Orchestra Leader), Stanley Andrews (Sheriff), Henry Roquemore (Stage Manager), Hank Bell (Deputy), Bill Steele (Tex Cole), Blackjack Ward (Buck Harrigan), Jim Corey (Lee Webb), Buck Moulton (Charles Evans), Ted Wells (Joe Lawrence), Joe De La Cruz (Mex), Frank Cordell (Bean Henchman), Philip Connor (John Yancy), Capt. C. E. Anderson (Hezikiah Willever)
Distribution: United Artists
99 minutes
The Letter
(1940)
Warner Brothers/First National
In charge of production: Jack L. Warner
Executive producer: Hal B. Wallis
Director: William Wyler
Associate producer: Robert Lord
Screenplay: Howard Koch, based on the play by W. Somerset Maugham
Photography: Tony Gaudio
Editors: George Amy and Warren Low
Art direction: Carl Jules-Weyl
Gowns: Orry-Kelly
Music: Max Steiner
Technical advisers: Louis Vincenot and John Villasin
Assistant director: Sherry Shourds
Sound: Dolph Thomas
Cast: Bette Davis (Leslie Crosbie), Herbert Marshall (Robert Crosbie), James Stephenson (Howard Joyce), Frieda Inescort (Dorothy Joyce), Gale Sondergaard (Mrs. Hammond), Bruce Lester (John Withers), Elizabeth Earl (Adele Ainsworth), Cecil Kellaway (Prescott), Sen Yung (Ong Chi Seng), Doris Lloyd (Mrs. Cooper), Willie Fung (Chung Hi), Tetsu Kornai (Head Boy)
Distribution: Warner Brothers
95 minutes
The Little Foxes
(1941)
Samuel Goldwyn Production
Producer: Samuel Goldwyn
Director: William Wyler
Screenplay: Lillian Hellman, based on her stage play as produced by Herman Shumlin
Additional scenes and dialogue: Arthur Kober, Dorothy Parker, and Alan Campbell
Photography: Gregg Toland
Editor: Daniel Mandell
Art direction: Stephen Goosson
Set decoration: Howard Bristol
Costumes: Orry-Kelly
Music: Meredith Wilson
Sound recorder: Frank Maher
Assistant director: William Tummel
Cast: Bette Davis (Regina Hubbard Giddens), Herbert Marshall (Horace Giddens), Teresa Wright (Alexandra Giddens), Richard Carlson (David Hewitt), Patricia Collinge (Birdie Hubbard), Dan Duryea (Leo Hubbard), Charles Dingle (Ben Hubbard), Carl Benton Reid (Oscar Hubbard), John Marriott (Cal), Jessie Grayson (Addie), Russell Hicks (William Marshall), Lucien Littlefield (Sam Menders), Virginia Brissac (Mrs. Lucy Hewitt), Terry Nibert (Julia), Charles R. Moore (Simon), Henry “Hot Shot” Thomas (Harold), Alan Bridge (Hotel Manager), Kenny Washington (Servant), Hooper Atchley (Guest), Lew Kelly (Train Companion), Henry Roquemore (Depositor)
Distribution: RKO Pictures
116 minutes
Mrs. Miniver
(1942)
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Producer: Sidney Franklin
Director: William Wyler
Screenplay: Arthur Wimperis, George Froeschel, James Hilton, and Claudine West, based on the novel by Jan Struther
Photography: Joseph Ruttenberg
Editor: Harold F. Kress
Art direction: Cedric Gibbons
Set decoration: Edwin B. Willis
Musical score: Herbert Stothart
Song: “Midsummer's Day” by Gene Lockhart
Cast: Greer Garson (Mrs. Miniver), Walter Pidgeon (Clem Miniver), Teresa Wright (Carol Beldon), Dame May Whitty (Lady Beldon), Reginald Owen (Foley), Henry Travers (Mr. Ballard), Richard Ney (Olin Miniver), Henry Wilcoxon (Vicar), Christopher Severn (Toby Miniver), Brenda Forbes (Gladys), Clare Sandars (Judy Miniver), Marie de Becker (Ada), Helmut Dentine (German Flyer), John Abbott (Fred), Connie Leon (Simpson), Rhys William (Horace), Mary Field (Miss Spriggins), Ben Webster (Ginger), Paul Scardon (Nobby), Aubrey Mather (Innkeeper), Forrester Harvey (Huggins), Billy Sevin (Conductor), Ottola Smith (Saleslady), Gerald Oliver Smith (Car Dealer), Alec Craig (Joe), Clara Reid (Mrs. Huggins), John Burton (Halliday), Leonard Carey (Beldon's Butler), Eric Lonsdale (Marston), Arthur Wimperis (Sir Henry), David Clyde (Carruthers), Colin Campbell (Sickles), Herbert Clifton (Doctor), Thomas Louden (Mr. Verger), Peter Lawford (Pilot), Miles Mander (German Agent's Voice), St. Luke's Choristers
Distribution: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
134 minutes