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Our Blushing Brides

Our Blushing Brides
Posterourbb.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Harry Beaumont (uncredited)
Produced by Harry Beaumont
Written by Bess Meredyth
John Howard Lawson
Edwin Justus Mayer
Helen Meinardi (uncredited)
Starring Joan Crawford
Anita Page
Dorothy Sebastian
Robert Montgomery
Cinematography Merritt B. Gerstad
Edited by George Hively
Harold Palmer (uncredited)
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • July 19, 1930 (1930-07-19)
Running time
99 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $337,000
Box office $1,211,000

Our Blushing Brides is a 1930 American Pre-Code society comedy/romantic melodrama directed and produced by Harry Beaumont, and starring Joan Crawford, Robert Montgomery, Anita Page, and Dorothy Sebastian.

The film is a follow-up to Our Dancing Daughters (1928) and Our Modern Maidens (1929), which also starred Crawford, Page, and Sebastian. The two previous installments in the series were both silent films, while Our Blushing Brides is a sound film which was a relatively new aspect to motion pictures. The fact that it features audible dialogue was an advertising point mentioned on the movie poster.

Our Blushing Brides is Crawford's thirty-first film (of eighty-six total), and her fourth sound film. In her first "shopgirl-Cinderella" role, Crawford plays the role of Gerry, a department store "mannequin" who falls in love with the wealthy son of her boss. The role was a departure from Crawford's flapper girl persona of the silent area as Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer began to develop a more sophisticated image of her.

Fellow department store shopgirls and roommates Gerry March (Crawford), Connie Blair (Anita Page) and Franky Daniels (Dorothy Sebastian) take different paths in New York City, but all seek to marry wealthy men. Connie pursues an affair with David Jardine (Raymond Hackett), son of the department store owner. Meanwhile, Franky meets the slick-talking Marty Sanderson (John Miljan) when he comes into the store to buy $500 worth of towels. However, when Sanderson comes to pick Franky up, he hits on Gerry instead.


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