Seven Sweethearts (1942) | |
Director(s) | Frank Borzage |
Producer(s) | Frank Borzage, Joe Pasternak |
Top Genres | Musical, Romance |
Top Topics |
Featured Cast:
Seven Sweethearts Overview:
Seven Sweethearts (1942) was a Musical - Romance Film directed by Frank Borzage and produced by Frank Borzage and Joe Pasternak.
BlogHub Articles:
Seven Sweethearts (1942)
By Lindsey on Jan 15, 2016 From The Motion Pictures“To this great land of jive and juleps, the Dutch once came to plant their tulips… They grit their teeth, pulled in their belts, produced New York – and the Roosevelts… Enriched this best of melting pots with their traditions, towns and tots… Behold! In Michigan today t... Read full article
Musical Monday: Seven Sweethearts (1942)
on Nov 25, 2013 From Comet Over HollywoodIt?s no secret that the Hollywood Comet loves musicals. In 2010, I revealed I had seen 400 movie musicals over the course of eight years. Now that number is over 500. To celebrate and share this musical love, here is my weekly feature about musicals. This week?s musical: ?Seven Sweethearts” (1... Read full article
See all Seven Sweethearts articles
Quotes from
No Quote for this film.
Facts about
Ann Rutherford was originally supposed to appear in this film, but she caught measles. When she called in sick Louis B. Mayer had her fired, and replaced her with Peggy Moran.
Early news items listed Ann Rutherford, Philip Van Zandt and Douglas McPhail in the cast, but they did not appear in the film.
Although the onscreen credits say "original screenplay", a $200,000 lawsuit was filed against the screenwiters, MGM and producer Joe Pasternak by playwright Ferenc Herczeg in 1949, claiming they took the idea from his 1903 play. Herczeg was in a Nazi concentration camp in 1942 when the film was released, and didn't hear about it until 1948. The case was settled out of court for a substantial amount.
read more facts about Seven Sweethearts...
Early news items listed Ann Rutherford, Philip Van Zandt and Douglas McPhail in the cast, but they did not appear in the film.
Although the onscreen credits say "original screenplay", a $200,000 lawsuit was filed against the screenwiters, MGM and producer Joe Pasternak by playwright Ferenc Herczeg in 1949, claiming they took the idea from his 1903 play. Herczeg was in a Nazi concentration camp in 1942 when the film was released, and didn't hear about it until 1948. The case was settled out of court for a substantial amount.
read more facts about Seven Sweethearts...