The Lady in Question | |
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Directed by | Charles Vidor |
Produced by | B.B. Kahane |
Written by |
Jan Lustig Lewis Meltzer |
Based on |
Gribouille 1937 French film by Marcel Achard |
Starring |
Brian Aherne Rita Hayworth Glenn Ford |
Music by | Lucien Moraweck |
Cinematography | Lucien Andriot |
Edited by | Al Clark |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date
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Running time
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80 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Lady in Question is a 1940 American comedy drama film directed by Charles Vidor and starring Brian Aherne, Rita Hayworth and Glenn Ford. It is a remake of the 1937 French film Gribouille.
This was the first of five films in which Glenn Ford and Rita Hayworth appeared together, most famously in their second film, Gilda (1946). They also teamed together in The Loves of Carmen (1948), Affair in Trinidad (1952) and The Money Trap (1965). Their off-screen liaisons were soon transformed into an enduring, lifelong friendship.
While serving on a Paris jury Andre Morestan (Brian Aherne) persuades his deadlocked peers to vote for the acquittal of Natalie Roguin's (Rita Hayworth), a young woman on trial for the death of a young man she had been seeing. Securing her innocence, Morestan invites her to live and work at his bicycle and music shop when no one else will give her a job. However, he decides to keep her true identity a secret, which soon begins to raise doubts within his family. His son (Glenn Ford) soon falls in love with her, even though he knows who she is.
Eventually, Andre is persuaded by a fellow former juror that she was in fact guilty. He goes to the authorities, but learns from them that new evidence has turned up that completely exonerates her.