She Shall Have Music (1935)
April 14, 1935Release Date
Plot.
Millionaire shipbuilder Freddie Gates decides to publicize his ships by hiring Jack Hylton and his orchestra to broadcast from his yacht.. Brian Gates, Freddie's son, has a low-approval-rating and a high dislike for jazz music and refuses board ship with the band on board. His father enters a conspiracy with singer Dorothy Drew to get him on the yacht, where the broadcasts will be made. Brian falls in love with Dorothy, but calls of the romance when he sees her dancing and singing with Hylton's band in Paris. Dorothy induces three members of the band to shanghai Brian when the yacht sails. A rival shipowner, determined to stop the broadcasts, bribes the crew to desert the ship and all hands are left stranded in mid-ocean on the yacht. The band-members manage to extricate them from their predicament and they get back to London, where Hylton is acclaimed and Brian marries Dorothy.
Where to Watch.
No streaming offers found
Cast & Crew.
Jack Hylton
Jack Hylton - Bandleader
Claude Dampier
Eddie
June Clyde
Dorothy Drew
Brian Lawrance
Brian Gates
Gwen Farrar
Miss Peachum
Marjorie Brooks
Mrs. Marlow
Leslie S. Hiscott
Director
Edmund Breon
Freddie Gates
Paul England
Writer
Felix Aylmer
Donald Black
H. Fowler Mear
Writer
Arthur Macrae
Writer
C. Denier Warren
Writer
Sydney Blythe
Cinematographer
Ernest Sefton
Mr. Wallace
Billy Mann
Mathea Merryfield
Magda Neeld
Freddy Schweitzer
Ken Smoothey
Baby Terry
Diana Ward
Langley Howard
Eddie Hooper
Details.
Release DateApril 14, 1935
StatusReleased
Wiki.
She Shall Have Music is a 1935 British musical comedy film directed by Leslie S. Hiscott and starring Jack Hylton, June Clyde and Claude Dampier. Hylton played himself in a story built around a millionaire shipowner who hires a band (led by Hylton) to publicise his ships. It was also released as Wherever She Goes.
The film was made at Twickenham Studios. The film's sets were designed by the art director James A. Carter.
For distribution in the United States, to comply with the 1930 Motion Picture Production Code scenes involving portions of two songs and a dance featuring "an undue amount of nudity" were removed.