David L. Loew


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Movie Clip

Private Affairs Of Bel Ami, The (1947) -- (Movie Clip) Fate Perhaps Had A Hand Efficient piece by director Albert Lewin, Duroy (George Sanders), in a suit paid for by his host, meets Clotilde (Angela Lansbury), his host’s wife (Ann Dvorak) and guests (David Bond, Frances Dee, Warren William, Hugo Haas, Katherine Emery, Susan Douglas and Albert Basserman), early in The Private Affairs Of Bel Ami, 1947.
Private Affairs Of Bel Ami, The (1947) -- (Movie Clip) History Of A Scoundrel Opening scene by writer-director Albert Lewin, leading man George Sanders as Georges Duroy, brushes off a stranger (Marie Wilson) before meeting his old war buddy Forestier (John Carradine) by chance in a Paris cafè, in The Private Affairs Of Bel Ami, 1947, from a novel by Guy de Maupassant.
Private Affairs Of Bel Ami, The (1947) -- (Movie Clip) Clever Enough To Be Beautiful His motives questionable, newly-employed as a novice journalist, Parisian Duroy (George Sanders) has become interested in young widow Clotilde (Angela Lansbury), with an original song by Jack Lawrence and Irving Drutman, and sly conversation in a carriage, in writer-director Albert Lewin’s The Private Affairs Of Bel Ami, 1947.
Moon And Sixpence, The (1942) -- (Movie Clip) The Riddle Of Strickland Opening with Herbert Marshall, as "Wolfe," not for the last time playing the first person author narrating from a W. Somerset Maugham novel, from director Albert Lewin's The Moon And Sixpence, 1942, also starring George Sanders.
Moon And Sixpence, The (1942) -- (Movie Clip) You're So Simple Little-esteemed Dutch painter Stroeve (Steve Geray) brings writer Wolfe (Herbert Marshall) to meet British ex-pat painter Strickland (George Sanders) in Paris, in The Moon And Sixpence, 1942, from W. Somerset Maugham's novel based on the life of Gaugin.
Moon And Sixpence, The (1942) -- (Movie Clip) She'll Manage British writer Wolfe (Herbert Marshall) arrives in Paris chasing stockbroker Strickland (George Sanders), who's abandoned his family back in London, in Albert Lewin's The Moon And Sixpence, 1942, from the W. Somerset Maugham novel.

Bibliography