Recaptured Love

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Recaptured Love
File:Recaptured Love 1930 Poster.jpg
Directed by John G. Adolfi
Written by Charles Kenyon based on the play Misdeal by Basil Woon
Starring John Halliday
Belle Bennett
Dorothy Burgess
Junior Durkin
Cinematography John Stumar
Edited by James Gibbon
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release dates
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  • July 8, 1930 (1930-07-08)
Running time
77 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Recaptured Love is a 1930 early talkie pre-Code musical drama film based on the play Misdeal by Basil Woon about a man who experiences a mid life crisis that results in his divorce. It stars Belle Bennett and John Halliday.

Plot

In this drama, a 50-year-old married man (played by John Halliday) goes with his wife (Belle Bennett) and son (Junior Durkin) to a nightclub in a fancy hotel in Detroit. He meets a gold-digger (Dorothy Burgess) there, singing the theme song of the picture, and eventually ends up going out with her on a subsequent occasion and falls in love with her. His wife finally finds out and this leads to her leaving him and getting a divorce in Paris. He is married to the gold-digger but finds life with her and her "jazz friends" to be too much for him. He begins to long for his old wife when he finds her in a nightclub with another man (Richard Tucker, not the famous tenor) and becomes jealous.

Trivia

The Sisters "G" (Eleanor Gutchrlein and Karla Gutchrlein) appear in the elaborate tango dance number at the beginning of the film. They were hired by Warner Bros. to star in a number of musical pictures but they left late in 1930 due to a backlash against musicals after appearing in only two more pictures, which proved to be their last.[citation needed]

The theme song is "If You Want to Be" and is sung by Dorothy Burgess. The entire movie has a musical track which features popular hits of the day as well as the theme song.[citation needed]

Preservation

The film survives complete. It was transferred on to 16mm film by Associated Artists Productions in the 1966 and shown on television. A 16mm copy is housed at the Wisconsin Center for Film & Theater Research.[1]

Cast

External links

References

  1. Noted: Recaptured Love, wisconsinhistory.org; accessed July 23, 2015.