Louis Bromfield


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Movie Clip

Rains Came, The (1939) -- (Movie Clip) Cast Iron Petticoat From the opening scene, Brit artist Ransome (George Brent) and local doctor Major Safti (Tyrone Power) discuss the former's inertia and the state of contemporary India, a missionary mother and daughter (Marjorie Rambeau, Brenda Joyce) visiting, in The Rains Came, 1939, co-starring Myrna Loy.
Rains Came, The (1939) -- (Movie Clip) Have You Become Fond Of Money? Ransome (George Brent), an idle British painter long resident in a fictional Indian state, chats with Lady Edwina (Myrna Loy), after having discovered to their mutual surprise that she, the wife of a visiting lord, is also his old flame, in The Rains Came, 1939, also starring Tyrone Power.
Rains Came, The (1939) -- (Movie Clip) Sentimental Nonsense Idealistic Indian military doctor Major Safti (Tyrone Power) is giving Lady Edwina (Myrna Loy), the bored wife of a visiting British nobleman, a tour of local attractions, in The Rains Came, 1939, from the novel by the acclaimed American author Louis Bromfield.
Mrs. Parkington (1944) -- (Movie Clip) I Own A Mountain Her first flashback, Greer Garson as the then-unmarried, brunette title character Susie, Walter Pidgeon as Parkington, wealthy New York mine-owner, arriving at the Nevada boarding house of her mother (Mary Servoss), confronted by a chippy miner (Charles Cane), in MGM's Mrs. Parkington, 1944.
Mrs. Parkington (1944) -- (Movie Clip) Great American Family Introducing Greer Garson, title character, with schmoozing son-in-law Amory (Edward Arnold), his wife (Helen Stillman), Alice (Florence Bates) and Madeleine (Lee Patrick) her daughters, Rod Cameron a new husband, grandson Dan Duryea, Byron Foulger a hired author, in Mrs. Parkington, 1944.
Mrs. Parkington (1944) -- (Movie Clip) Not Just A Man Newlywed working class Nevada girl Susie (Greer Garson, title character), her first morning at her husband's New York mansion, wakened by Baroness Aspasia (Agnes Moorehead) who, until that day, had been fiancee` to "The Major," graciously befriending her usurper, in Mrs. Parkington, 1944.

Bibliography