1952 in Music - Musical Films

Musical Films

  • Aaron Slick from Punkin Crick starring Alan Young, Dinah Shore, Robert Merrill and Adele Jergens. Directed by Claude Binyon.
  • Affair in Trinidad starring Rita Hayworth and Glenn Ford
  • April in Paris starring Doris Day and Ray Bolger
  • Because You're Mine starring Mario Lanza and Doretta Morrow
  • Bloodhounds of Broadway starring Mitzi Gaynor, Scott Brady and Mitzi Green
  • Everything I Have Is Yours starring Marge Champion, Gower Champion and Monica Lewis
  • Hans Christian Andersen starring Danny Kaye and Jane Wyman
  • Just for You starring Bing Crosby and Jane Wyman
  • The Las Vegas Story starring Jane Russell, Victor Mature and Hoagy Carmichael
  • Lovely to Look At starring Kathryn Grayson, Red Skelton, Howard Keel, Marge Champion, Gower Champion and Ann Miller
  • Meet Danny Wilson starring Frank Sinatra and Shelley Winters
  • The Merry Widow starring Lana Turner, Fernando Lamas and Una Merkel
  • Road to Bali starring Bing Crosby, Bob Hope and Dorothy Lamour
  • She's Working Her Way Through College starring Virginia Mayo and Ronald Reagan
  • Singin' in the Rain starring Gene Kelly, Donald O'Connor and Debbie Reynolds
  • Skirts Ahoy! starring Esther Williams, Joan Evans, Vivian Blaine and Keefe Brasselle, and featuring Billy Eckstine, The DeMarco Sisters, Debbie Reynolds and Bobby Van.
  • Son of Paleface starring Bob Hope, Jane Russell, Roy Rogers and Trigger
  • Where's Charley? starring Ray Bolger and Allyn Ann McLerie
  • With A Song In My Heart starring Susan Hayward and Rory Calhoun

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Famous quotes containing the words musical and/or films:

    If we cannot sing of faith and triumph, we will sing our despair. We will be that kind of bird. There are day owls, and there are night owls, and each is beautiful and even musical while about its business.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    The cinema is not an art which films life: the cinema is something between art and life. Unlike painting and literature, the cinema both gives to life and takes from it, and I try to render this concept in my films. Literature and painting both exist as art from the very start; the cinema doesn’t.
    Jean-Luc Godard (b. 1930)