Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
True to Life (film)
1943 film by George Marshall From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
True to Life is a 1943 American comedy film directed by George Marshall and starring Mary Martin, Franchot Tone and Dick Powell.[1] The film features three songs by Hoagy Carmichael with lyrics by Johnny Mercer.[2]
Remove ads
Plot
Writers Fletcher Marvin and Link Ferris must improve their scripts for a radio drama or face the wrath of their sponsor, a major soap company. Going in different directions, Fletcher heads to "bright lights and lovely ladies", while Link meets the Porter family and falls in love with their daughter, Bonnie.[2] She mistakenly believes that he is unemployed and poor, and takes him back to lodge at her house while he seeks work. He meets her family including her eccentric inventor father and gruff, layabout uncle. He begins using them as characters in his new radio show, which rapidly becomes an enormous hit. He has to do everything he can to prevent the family finding out that he is turning their everyday lives and conversations into entertainment, a task not helped when his writing partner Fletcher turns up believing that the show could do with the plot development of a romantic rival.
Remove ads
Cast
- Mary Martin as Bonnie Porter
- Franchot Tone as Fletcher Marvin
- Dick Powell as Link Ferris
- Victor Moore as Pop Porter
- Mabel Paige as Mom Porter
- William Demarest as Uncle Jake
- Clarence Kolb as Mr. Huggins
- Beverly Hudson as Twips
- Raymond Roe as Clem
- Ernest Truex as Oscar Elkins
- Harry Shannon as Mr. Mason
- Stanley Andrews as Frank, Bakery Foreman
- Charles R. Moore as Gabe the Butler
- Nestor Paiva as Kapopolis
- Tim Ryan as Mr. Mammal
Remove ads
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads