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  1. Journey for Margaret (1942) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  2. United States. Language. English. Budget. $484,000 [1] [2] Box office. $1,534,000 [2] Journey for Margaret is a 1942 American drama film set in London in World War II. [3] It stars Robert Young and Laraine Day as a couple who have to confront the loss of their unborn child due to a bombing raid.

    • $484,000
    • B. P. Fineman, Dore Schary
  3. Journey for Margaret: Directed by W.S. Van Dyke, Herbert Kline. With Robert Young, Laraine Day, Fay Bainter, Nigel Bruce. John Davis, a married American newspaper reporter in London, covers the story of a home for children displaced by the war and meets two kids who grow attached to him.

    • (946)
    • Drama, Romance, War
    • W.S. Van Dyke, Herbert Kline
    • 1942-12
  4. New York opening: 17 Dec 1942; release: Dec 1942--Feb 1943. Production Company. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corp. Distribution Company. Loew's Inc. Country. United States. Screenplay Information. Based on the novel Journey for Margaret by William L. White (New York, 1941).

  5. Journey for Margaret would have marked the American motion picture debut of the Swedish-born Hasso, but her first appearance was in the 1943 M-G-M film Assignment in Brittany in 1943 (see above). A Mar 1942 HR news item adds that Carolyn Lee was considered for a lead in the film. An M-G-M news item hat Sam Marx was originally to produce the ...

  6. An American newspaperman and his wife, end up in London after several retreats in the opening days of WWII. After a shrapnel wound and loss of her baby she returns to America. War weary, he is forced to do a story about war orphans, where he meets Margaret.

  7. After a shrapnel wound and loss of her baby she returns to America. War weary, he is forced to do a story about war orphans, where he meets Margaret. W.S. Van Dyke. Director. William Ludwig. Screenplay. David Hertz. Screenplay. An American newspaperman and his wife, end up in London after several retreats in the opening days of WWII.

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