Mae West Roger Pryor John Mack Brown Katherine DeMille Duke Ellington
Cinematography
Karl Struss
Edited by
LeRoy Stone
Music by
Arthur Johnston
Production company
Paramount Pictures
Distributed by
Paramount Pictures
Release date
September 21, 1934 (1934-09-21)
Running time
75 minutes
Country
United States
Language
English
Budget
$800,000 (estimated)[1]
Belle of the Nineties is a 1934 American Western film directed by Leo McCarey and released by Paramount Pictures. Mae West's fourth motion picture, it was based on her original story It Ain't No Sin, which was also to be the film's title until censors objected. Johnny Mack Brown, Duke Ellington, and Katherine DeMille are also in the cast. The film is noted for being the premiere performance of the jazz standard "My Old Flame", performed by West with the Duke Ellington Orchestra.
^"Box office / business for Belle of the Nineties". IMDb. Retrieved June 20, 2009.
and 22 Related for: Belle of the Nineties information
the nemesis of Mae West's character in BelleoftheNineties (1934). She played the second female role in All the King's Horses (1935) at Paramount, and...
by the censors. She hoped they would then not object as much to her other less suggestive lines. Her next film was BelleoftheNineties (1934). The original...
(uncredited) Operator 13 (1934) The Old Fashioned Way (1934) as Train porter The Dragon Murder Case (1934) BelleoftheNineties (1934) as Jasmine's admirer...
Coslow for the film BelleoftheNineties. It has since become a jazz standard. "My Old Flame" first appeared in the 1934 film BelleoftheNineties when it...
(Six of a Kind, 1934), and Mae West (BelleoftheNineties, 1934). A series of six films at Paramount came to a crashing halt with his production of Make...
September The Scarlet Empress 17 September Young and Beautiful 19 September A Lost Lady 21 September BelleoftheNinetiesThe Richest Girl in the World 22...
played in scenes opposite several stars ofthe Golden Age of Hollywood including Mae West in BelleoftheNineties (1934) and Harold Lloyd in Professor Beware...
Orchestra also appeared in the features Murder at the Vanities and BelleoftheNineties (both 1934). For agent Mills, the attention was a publicity triumph...
including BelleoftheNineties, Klondike Annie, Sadie McKee – all 1934 releases, Songs and Saddles (1938), and My Little Chickadee (1940) at the request of his...
Chain Gang, 1932 The Cabin in the Cotton, 1932 The Wet Parade, 1932 The Story of Temple Drake, 1933 Bed of Roses, 1933 BelleoftheNineties, 1934 It Happened...
refused the male lead in Mae West's It Ain't No Sin (later changed to BelleoftheNineties) because his part was subordinate to West's. In May 1934, Raft signed...
to 20 February 2022 in person. On 15 December 2021 the first film ofthe festival was announced. The festival opened with François Ozon's drama film Peter...
Bride (1933) Hollywood on Parade No. A-8 (1933) BelleoftheNineties (1934) Babes In Toyland (1934) The Bohemian Girl (1936) Way Out West (1937) Saps at...
Darwin Player (uncredited) BelleoftheNineties (1934) – Admirer (uncredited) Goin' to Town (1935) – Cowboy (uncredited) The Murder Man (1935) – Sing Sing...
Streets (1934) as Adam Blythe BelleoftheNineties (1934) as Brooks Claybourne Against the Law (1934) as Steve Wayne Rustlers of Red Dog (1935) as Jack Wood...
hero's comic sidekick. Knight was born in Fairmont, West Virginia, the third child and son of James A. and Olive Knight. In Fairmont, he worked as a clerk at...
Orleans Blues" from BelleoftheNineties "When She's Gone, She's Gone by Brooks and Dunn "When The Levee Breaks" by Galactic "When The Saints Go Marching...