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No More Ladies. No More Ladies is a 1935 American romantic comedy film directed by Edward H. Griffith. The film stars Joan Crawford and Robert Montgomery, and co-stars Charlie Ruggles, Franchot Tone, and Edna May Oliver. The screenplay credited to Donald Ogden Stewart and Horace Jackson is based on a stage comedy of the same name by A.E. Thomas.
No More Ladies: Directed by Edward H. Griffith, George Cukor. With Joan Crawford, Robert Montgomery, Charles Ruggles, Franchot Tone. A society girl tries to reform her playboy husband by making him jealous.
- (922)
- Comedy, Romance
- Edward H. Griffith, George Cukor
- 1935-06-14
No More Ladies, or so Marcia (Joan) hopes when she and Sheridan Warren (Robert Montgomery) decide to marry in this 1935 soaper.“Sherry” is a serial womanizer. When he strays---the extent of his indiscretion is left to your imagination, as . NML is post-Code---Marcia concocts a plan to make him jealous by arranging a party with a guest list that includes several of Sherry’s former ...
Jul 7, 2010 · Salut, Sherry! The sparks fly in this giddy comedy of manners (co-scripted by The Philadelphia Story's Donald Ogden Stewart) starring Joan Crawford and Robert Montgomery. Most giddy of all: the cocktail-fueled witticisms of co-stars Edna May Oliver and Charlie Ruggles. No More Ladies -- lots of Golden Era fun!
- (32)
- Warner Bros.
- $9.99
- NTSC, Full Screen, Black & White, Dolby
Released in 1935, "No More Ladies" is an American comedy film that drew the audience into the complex world of love, marriage, and infidelity. Starring Joan Crawford, Robert Montgomery, and Charlie Ruggles, the movie was distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM).
Joan Crawford had been an MGM contract player for 10 years and one of the studio's major stars for seven when she made No More Ladies (1935), a typically glossy vehicle in which she plays a beautiful young socialite who believes in marital fidelity. Still, she chooses to marry consummate philanderer Robert Montgomery rather than faithful suitor ...
Robert Montgomery (I) (1904–1981)
- 3 min
- 12.8K
- Eddie 91