Lady of the Pavements (UK title: Lady of the Night) is a 1929 American sound part-talkie romantic drama film directed by D. W. Griffith and starring Lupe Vélez, William Boyd, and Jetta Goudal. The screenplay was written by Sam Taylor, with contributions from an uncredited Gerrit Lloyd.[1] While the film has a few talking sequences, the majority of the film features a synchronized musical score with sound effects using both the sound-on-disc and sound-on-film process.[2]
Lady of the Pavements | |
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Directed by | D. W. Griffith |
Screenplay by | Sam Taylor |
Based on | La Paiva by Karl Vollmoller |
Produced by | Joseph M. Schenck |
Starring | Lupe Vélez William Boyd Jetta Goudal |
Cinematography | Karl Struss |
Edited by | James Smith |
Music by | Irving Berlin |
Production company | Art Cinema Corporation |
Distributed by | United Artists |
Release date |
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Running time | 85 minutes |
Country | United States |
Languages | Sound (Part-Talkie) (English Intertitles) |
Disgusted that his fiancée, Diane (Jetta Goudal) has been cheating on him, Karl (William Boyd) says he'd rather marry a "street walker" than her. To get back at him, Diane arranges for Nanoni ("Little One") (Lupe Vélez), a singer at a sleazy bar, to pretend to be a Spanish girl, from a convent, to fool him.[3]
The film featured a theme song entitled “Where Is The Song Of Songs For Me?” which was composed by Irving Berlin.
The film survives in a mute print that required the use of the Vitaphone sound-on-disc system. Soundtrack discs for reels 6 and 8 survive in the UCLA Film and Television Archive. Additional soundtrack discs to this film were donated by Arthur Lennig to the George Eastman House Motion Picture Collection in Rochester, New York.