An Italian opera singer (Ezio Pinza) has a marriage of convenience with an innocent fan (Janet Leigh) from MississippiAn Italian opera singer (Ezio Pinza) has a marriage of convenience with an innocent fan (Janet Leigh) from MississippiAn Italian opera singer (Ezio Pinza) has a marriage of convenience with an innocent fan (Janet Leigh) from Mississippi
Scott R. Beal
- Vendor
- (uncredited)
Douglas Carter
- Taxi Driver
- (uncredited)
Maurice Cass
- Little Man
- (uncredited)
Eileen Christy
- Girl at Railroad Station
- (uncredited)
Ken Christy
- Train Conductor
- (uncredited)
Lyle Clark
- Assistant Stage Manager
- (uncredited)
Harry Cody
- Conductor
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis film failed at the box office, resulting in a loss to MGM of $664,000 according to studio records.
- GoofsThis story is supposedly set in the 1920s, yet the fashions and hairdos are strictly from 1951.
- ConnectionsFeatures A Woman of Affairs (1928)
- SoundtracksEverything I Have Is Yours
(uncredited)
Music by Burton Lane
Lyrics by Harold Adamson
Played over main title and Sung by Ezio Pinza
Featured review
Leigh...mississippi??
Back in the 1940s-50s, there were a couple films which explored May-December romances, where a man married a much younger woman. Both "That Hagan Girl" and "Strictly Dishonorable" explored this...and were both failures. Audiences just didn't seem to want to see relatively old guys with very young women. But despite this, is "Strictly Dishonorable" worth seeing?
The film stars the opera star Ezio Pinza, a wonderful singer who made a hand full of movies to indifferent public reactions. He was 35 years older than his co-star, Janet Leigh. Oddly, Leigh is cast as a Mississippian! The accent is odd and I guess they made her from Mississippi because she was a Mississippian in the original play it was based upon.
Pinza plays Gus, a guy pretty much like himself...a world famous opera star. However, he's NOT happy, as his co-star in an upcoming opera has practically no talent at all...and eventually he informs everyone he won't perform with the woman...and rightfully so. But the woman is a jerk and she's married to an even bigger jerk who owns a newspaper....and the newspaper owner creates all sorts of scurrilous stories about Gus.
Later, Gus has a kooky woman (Janet Leigh) over to his apartment. His manager thinks the newspaper will once again try to make something of this...so the solution is for Guy to marry Isabelle! They barely know each other. But what happens next, well, NONE of it makes much sense and it involves a fabricated Breach of Promise suit. Again...it doesn't make much sense.
So it this any good? Not especially. Isabelle (Leigh) is supposed to be from Mississippi...an odd stetch. But the worst is that the sanitized script (the play and 1931 film were much racier) is boring and makes little sense. Plus, I am sure it didn't help the film having such a romance, as Pinza was nearly 60.
Overall, a decent time-passer IF you don't think much about the plot...which is a hopeless mess.
Back in the 1940s-50s, there were a couple films which explored May-December romances, where a man married a much younger woman. Both "That Hagan Girl" and "Strictly Dishonorable" explored this...and were both failures. Audiences just didn't seem to want to see relatively old guys with very young women. But despite this, is "Strictly Dishonorable" worth seeing?
The film stars the opera star Ezio Pinza, a wonderful singer who made a hand full of movies to indifferent public reactions. He was 35 years older than his co-star, Janet Leigh. Oddly, Leigh is cast as a Mississippian! The accent is odd and I guess they made her from Mississippi because she was a Mississippian in the original play it was based upon.
Pinza plays Gus, a guy pretty much like himself...a world famous opera star. However, he's NOT happy, as his co-star in an upcoming opera has practically no talent at all...and eventually he informs everyone he won't perform with the woman...and rightfully so. But the woman is a jerk and she's married to an even bigger jerk who owns a newspaper....and the newspaper owner creates all sorts of scurrilous stories about Gus.
Later, Gus has a kooky woman (Janet Leigh) over to his apartment. His manager thinks the newspaper will once again try to make something of this...so the solution is for Guy to marry Isabelle! They barely know each other. But what happens next, well, NONE of it makes much sense and it involves a fabricated Breach of Promise suit. Again...it doesn't make much sense.
So it this any good? Not especially. Isabelle (Leigh) is supposed to be from Mississippi...an odd stetch. But the worst is that the sanitized script (the play and 1931 film were much racier) is boring and makes little sense. Plus, I am sure it didn't help the film having such a romance, as Pinza was nearly 60.
Overall, a decent time-passer IF you don't think much about the plot...which is a hopeless mess.
- planktonrules
- Oct 25, 2024
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Designios escandalosos
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $1,182,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 35 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was Strictly Dishonorable (1951) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer