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

Read more about this topic:  1952 In Music

Famous quotes containing the words musical and/or films:

    There was something refreshingly and wildly musical to my ears in the very name of the white man’s canoe, reminding me of Charlevoix and Canadian Voyageurs. The batteau is a sort of mongrel between the canoe and the boat, a fur-trader’s boat.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Right now I think censorship is necessary; the things they’re doing and saying in films right now just shouldn’t be allowed. There’s no dignity anymore and I think that’s very important.
    Mae West (1892–1980)