The best Carl Brisson’s music movies

Carl Brisson

Carl Brisson

24/12/1893- 26/09/1958
Today we present the best Carl Brisson’s movies. If you are a great movie fan, you will surely know most of them, but we hope to discover a movie that you have not yet seen … and that you love! Let’s go there with the best Carl Brisson’s movies.

Ship Cafe

Ship Cafe
6.2/10
  • Genre: Music
  • Release: 09/11/1935
  • Character: Chris Anderson
The singing stoker and the vamp.

Murder at the Vanities

Murder at the Vanities
6.5/10
Shortly before the curtain goes up the first time at the latest performance of Earl Carroll's Vanities, someone is attempting to injure the leading lady Ann Ware, who wants to marry leading man Eric Lander. Stage manager Jack Ellery calls in his friend, policeman Bill Murdock, to help him investigate. Bill thinks Jack is offering to let him see the show from an unusual viewpoint after he forgot to get him tickets for the performance, but then they find the corpse of a murdered woman and Bill immediately suspects Eric of the crime.

Prince of Arcadia

Prince of Arcadia
  • Genre: Music
  • Release: 01/07/1933
  • Character: Prince Peter
A Ruritanian Prince is due to marry a princess with acting ambitions, but he has fallen in love with another woman.

All the King's Horses

All the King's Horses
5.4/10
Paramount Pictures decided in 1935 to create a new romantic team, thus cast singing stars Carl Brisson and Mary Ellis in the frothy operetta All the King's Horses. Brisson does the "Prisoner of Zenda" bit as a movie star who is forced by circumstances to impersonate a look-alike king. Ms. Ellis is the highborn lady who seems to be fooled by the ruse. The plots roll merrily onward while various and sundry musical-comedy character actors (including Edward Everett Horton and Eugene Pallette) fuss and fume in the background. Danish singer Carl Brisson had created a minor sensation by introducing "Cocktails for Two" in Paramount's Murder at the Vanities (34), but the studio's attempts to turn him into a Scandinavian Maurice Chevalier were unsuccessful.

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