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  2. Roughly Speaking: Directed by Michael Curtiz. With Rosalind Russell, Jack Carson, Robert Hutton, Jean Sullivan. Determined to overcome poverty, Louise Randall attends business school and weds Rodney Crane. Her driven nature leads to marital breakdown.

    • (880)
    • Comedy, Drama, Romance
    • Michael Curtiz
    • 1946-04-11
  3. Roughly Speaking is a 1945 American comedy-drama film directed by Michael Curtiz and starring Rosalind Russell and Jack Carson. The plot involves a strong-minded mother keeping her family afloat through World War I and the Great Depression .

  4. Definition of roughly speaking in the Idioms Dictionary. roughly speaking phrase. What does roughly speaking expression mean? Definitions by the largest Idiom Dictionary.

  5. 1h 57m. Overview. Synopsis. Credits. Photos & Videos. Film Details. Articles & Reviews. Notes. Brief Synopsis. A man's wild moneymaking schemes leave his wife to raise their family. Cast & Crew. Read More. Michael Curtiz. Director. Rosalind Russell. Louise Randall. Jack Carson. Harold Pierson. Robert Hutton. John, age 20-28. Jean Sullivan.

  6. Summaries. In 1902, enterprising Louise Randall is determined to succeed in a man's world. She enrolls at business college but her plans for a career change when she falls in love with handsome Rodney Crane. Although the two have little in common and Rodney disagrees with Louise's views on the woman's role in society, they marry and have four ...

  7. May 22, 2023 · roughly speaking ( comparative more roughly speaking, superlative most roughly speaking) Not being totally accurate (used as a phrase to specify). For our prosperity is inherited from our ancestors, and is of an earlier date than the prosperity not only of Philip, but, roughly speaking, of all the kings that have ever reigned in Macedonia.

  8. Appearing on screen for the first time after her narrated childhood, Rosalind Russell as heroine Louise Randall Pierson arrives at college ca. 1909, with friend Alice (Ann Doran) and her frightened dean (Aily Malyon), in the Warner Bros. bio-pic Roughly Speaking, 1945.

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