Sally | |
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theatrical release poster
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Directed by | John Francis Dillon |
Written by |
Waldemar Young A.P. Younger based on the Broadway musical by Guy Bolton and P.G. Wodehouse |
Starring |
Marilyn Miller Alexander Gray Joe E. Brown Pert Kelton |
Music by |
Jerome Kern Leonid S. Leonardi Irving Berlin Al Dubin Joe Burke |
Cinematography | Devereaux Jennings Charles Edgar Schoenbaum (Technicolor) |
Edited by | LeRoy Stone |
Production
company |
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Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Release date
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Running time
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103 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Sally is a 1929 American Pre-Code film. It is the fourth all talking all-color feature movie ever made and was photographed in the Technicolor process. It was the sixth feature movie to contain color that had been released by Warner Bros., the first five were The Desert Song (1929), On with the Show (1929), Gold Diggers of Broadway (1929), Paris (1929), and The Show of Shows (1929). (Song of the West was actually completed by June 1929 but had its release delayed until March 1930). Although exhibited in a few select theatres in December 1929, Sally only went into general release on January 12, 1930.
It was based on the Broadway stage hit, Sally, produced by Florenz Ziegfeld (which played at The New Amsterdam Theatre, from December 21, 1920 to April 22, 1922), and retains three of the stage production's Jerome Kern songs ("Look for the Silver Lining", "Sally", and "Wild Rose"), the rest of the music newly written for the film by Al Dubin and Joe Burke.
Marilyn Miller, who had played the leading part in the Broadway production, was hired by the Warner Brothers at an extravagant sum (reportedly $1000 an hour for a total of $100,000) to star in the filmed version. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Art Direction by Jack Okey in 1930.
Sally (Marilyn Miller) plays the part of an orphan who had been abandoned as a baby at the Bowling Green telephone exchange. While growing up in an orphanage, she discovered the joy of dancing. In an attempt to save money enough to become a dancer, Sally began working at odd jobs. While working as a waitress, a man named Blair (Alexander Gray) begins coming to her work regularly to see her. They both soon fall for each other.