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Name Occurs Before Title Offscreen Credit Print Viewed By AFI Stub Record
The Merry Widow
Director: Erich von Stroheim (Dir)
Release Date:   1925
Premiere Information:   New York premiere: 26 Aug 1925
Duration (in feet):   10,027
Duration (in reels):   10
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Cast:   Mae Murray (Sally O'Hara)  
    John Gilbert (Prince Danilo)  
    Roy D'Arcy (Crown Prince Mirko)  
    Josephine Crowell (Queen Milena)  
    George Fawcett (King Nikita)  
    Tully Marshall (Baron Sadoja)  
    Albert Conti (Danilo's adjutant)  
    Sidney Bracy (Danilo's footman)  
    Don Ryan (Mirko's adjutant)  
    Hughie Mack (Innkeeper)  
    Ida Moore (Innkeeper's wife)  
    Lucille von Lent (Innkeeper's daughter)  
    Dale Fuller (Sadoja's chambermaid)  
    Charles Magelis (Flo Epstein)  
    Harvey Karels (Jimmy Watson)  
    Edna Tichenor (Dopey Marie)  
    Gertrude Bennett (Hard-boiled Virginia)  
    Zala Zorana (Frenchie Christine)  
    Jacquelin Gadsdon (Madonna)  
    Estelle Clark (French barber)  
    D'Arcy Corrigan (Horatio)  
    Clara Wallacks (Hansen sister)  
    Frances Primm (Hansen sister)  
    Zack Williams (George Washington White)  
    Edward Connelly (Ambassador)  
    Merewyn Thayer (Ambassador's wife)  
    Lon Poff (Sadoja's lackey)  

Summary: Prince Danilo and Crown Prince Mirko of the Kingdom of Monteblanco meet Sally O'Hara, a follies girl on tour, and both seek to win her favor. Favoring Danilo, Sally accepts his proposal to dinner, and he does his charming best to seduce her. Mirko finds them in a compromising situation, and Danilo, overcome by genuine love for Sally, announces his intention of making her his wife. The king and queen prevent the marriage, and Sally, believing that Danilo has jilted her, spitefully marries Baron Sadoja, the richest man in the kingdom. The Baron dies of excitement on their wedding night, and Sally goes to Paris, where she becomes known as "The Merry Widow." Mirko later follows her there with the intention of seeking her hand and fortune in marriage. Danilo goes also, and Sally agrees to marry Mirko to further torment him. Danilo strikes Mirko, and a duel is arranged. Believing that Sally loves Mirko, Danilo allows the crown prince to shoot him. Danilo is only wounded, however, and discovers then that Sally loves him still. The king dies, the crown prince is assassinated, and Danilo becomes king, taking Sally as his queen. 

Production Company: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures  
Director: Erich von Stroheim (Dir)
  Eddy Sowders (Asst dir)
  Louis Germonprez (Asst dir)
Writer: Erich von Stroheim (Scen)
  Benjamin Glazer (Scen)
  Erich von Stroheim (Adpt)
  Benjamin Glazer (Adpt)
  Marian Ainslee (Titles)
Photography: Oliver T. Marsh (Dir of photog)
  Ben Reynolds (Dir of photog)
  William Daniels (Dir of photog)
Film Editor: Frank E. Hull (Film ed)
Set Decoration: Cedric Gibbons (Settings)
  Richard Day (Settings)
Costumes: Richard Day (Cost)
  Erich von Stroheim (Cost)
Music: William Axt (Mus score)
  David Mendoza (Mus score)
Country: United States
Language: English

Music:
Songs:
Source Text: Based on the operetta Die lustige witwe , music by Franz Lehar, book and lyrics by Victor Leon and Leo Stein (Vienna, 28 Dec 1905).
Authors: Victor Léon
  Leo Stein

Copyright Claimant Copyright Date Copyright Number
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures 14/9/1925 dd/mm/yyyy LP21826

Physical Properties: b&w:
  Si:

 
Genre: Romantic comedy
 
Subjects (Major): Assassination
  Chorus girls
  Duels
  Marriage
  Mythical lands
  Paris (France)
  Reputation
  Royalty
  Widows

Note: For information on other film versions of the story of "The Merry Widow," please see the entry for the 1934 M-G-M production, directed by Ernst Lubitsch and starring Maurice Chevalier and Jeanette MacDonald in AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1931-40

Bibliographic Sources:   Date   Page
Film Daily   30 Aug 1925   p. 4.
Life   1 Oct 1925   p. 24.
MPW   12 Sep 1925   p. 168.
New York Times   27 Aug 1925   p. 14.
Variety   2 Sep 1925   p. 36.

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