Vanity Fair
Vanity Fair is a 1932 American pre-Code drama film directed by Chester M. Franklin and starring Myrna Loy, Conway Tearle and Anthony Bushell. The film is modernized adaptation of William Makepeace Thackeray's 1848 novel of the same name with the original Regency-era story reset in Twentieth Century Britain. Three years later Thackeray's novel was adapted again as Becky Sharp, the first three-strip technicolor film.
Plot
This film adaptation's storyline begins around 1920 and concludes in 1933. In its opening scene a limousine is traveling down a road outside London. In the car are two passengers, Amelia Sedley (Barbara Kent) and her friend Becky Sharp (Myrna Loy), young ladies who agewise are in their twenties. Amelia is from a rich, well-connected family, while Becky is from very modest means and has no family at all. Given Becky's circumstances, Amelia has invited her to her home for the Christmas holidays.
More details
| author | F. Hugh Herbert |
|---|---|
| contentLocation | England London |
| director | Chester M. Franklin |
| editor | Mildred Johnston |
| genre | drama social |
| keywords | bet billy bevan bridge bureau cheat chest of drawers climb contract bridge cuddle drawing room engagement even fiancé film adaptation governess marriage proposal married mayfair old man open petty crimes police custody string travel wait write |
| producer | M. H. Hoffman |
| productionCompany | Chester M. Franklin Productions |
| publisher | Allied Pictures |