William A. Seiter (1890–1964)
Author of The Marx Brothers Collection (A Night at the Opera / A Day at the Races/ A Night In Casablanca / Room Service / At the Circus / Go West / The Big Store)
About the Author
Image credit: wikimedia.org
Works by William A. Seiter
The Marx Brothers Collection (A Night at the Opera / A Day at the Races/ A Night In Casablanca / Room Service / At the Circus / Go West / The Big Store) (2004) — Director — 59 copies
Susannah of the Mounties [1939 film] — Director — 17 copies
Shirley Temple: America's Sweetheart Collection, Vol. 3: Dimples / The Little Colonel / The Littlest Rebel (2015) — Director — 9 copies
I'll Be Yours [1947 film] — Director — 6 copies
Laurel & Hardy: Volume 13: Sons of the Desert / Related Shorts — Director — 3 copies
Shirley Temple - Dimples (DVD) 3 copies
Icons: 4 Film Collection: Fred Astaire — Director — 2 copies
Diplomaniacs [1933 film] — Director — 2 copies
It's A Pleasure [1945 film] — Director — 2 copies
Rafter Romance [1933 film] 1 copy
Laurel & Hardy: Features 1 — Director — 1 copy
Classic Cuts Collection: Musicals (You Were Never Lovelier / Top Hat / Cover Girl / Lover Come Back) [DVD] — Director — 1 copy
The Shirley Temple Collection: Baby Take a Bow, The Little Coronel, The Little Princess, The Biggest Lil' Star in Hollywood — Director — 1 copy
Sons of the Desert — Director — 1 copy
Is My Face Red? 1 copy
Three Blind Mice 1 copy
Chance at Heaven 1 copy
Make Haste to Live 1 copy
In Person 1 copy
Professional Sweetheart 1 copy
Brute Force 1 copy
It's a Pleasure 1 copy
Up in Central Park 1 copy
Associated Works
Icons of Screwball Comedy: Volume I: If You Could Only Cook / Too Many Husbands / My Sister Eileen / She Wouldn't Say Yes — Director — 11 copies
Marx Brothers Box Set: Love Happy, A Girl in Every Port, The Cocoanuts, Room Service, Animal Crackers, Monkey Business, Horse Feathers, Duck Soup — Director — 7 copies
The Shirley Temple Collection, Volume Two: Wee Willie Winkie, Stowaway, Baby Take a Bow, Bright Eyes, Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, Young People (2015) — Director — 4 copies
Shirley Temple: America’s Sweetheart Collection, Vol. 6: Stowaway / Wee Willie Winkie / Young People (2008) — Director — 3 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1890-06-10
- Date of death
- 1964-07-26
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- film director
screenwriter - Relationships
- Nixon, Marian (wife)
Griffin, Ted (grandson) - Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Nice Girl? ( Love at Last ) [ NON-USA FORMAT, PAL, Reg.2 Import - United Kingdom ] by William A. Seiter
This warm and sweet film full of charm and the values once held dear in small towns across America is one of Deanna Durbin’s finest. Based on a play by Phyllis Duganne, the screenplay by Richard Connell and Gladys Lehman captures the innocence of a time when going downtown for an ice cream soda and attending the town dance was a big deal.
The music is beautiful this time out, with Deanna getting to sing everything from the sweet “Beneath the Lights of Home” to the lovely “Love at show more Last” with music and lyrics by Jacques Press and Eddie Cherkose. The songs never seem intrusive here as is so often the case in straight-up musicals, but fit perfectly into the story. They are simply part of a mosaic painted here by director William A. Seiter and producer Joe Pasternak. Vera West dressed Deanna in this film and reminds the viewer that Durbin was everything a girl is supposed to be, and just a bit more.
Deanna is Jane Dana, the quiet daughter of Professor Dana (Robert Benchley). His youngest daughter, Nancy, is boy crazy, and his other daughter, Sylvia, wants to be an actress and takes every opportunity to ham it up. Jane takes care of the rabbits and helps her dad out with his research. He is hoping for a fellowship that will let him expand his work. When a big university sends Richard Calvert (Franchot Tone) to Stillwater to interview Jane’s dad for the grant, things will never be the same.
Jane’s boyfriend, Don (a very young Robert Stack), is so crazy about his car he misses all her signals for romance. When the handsome Richard appears on the scene, all three sisters descend on him like bees to a pot of honey. Young Nancy’s attempts to seem older are a hoot, but Jane has the inside track when she borrows Don’s car and in order to play seductress. But Jane has a small-town heart, rather than a sophisticated one, and Richard has no designs on taking advantage of her; though those gowns by Vera West make it tempting.
Franchot Tone worked well opposite Durbin on more than one occasion, and is terrific here. His on-screen rapport with Durbin is quite pleasing. Once Jane returns home and the whole town knows the 5-cent scandal, she tries to save face when Don just assumes that nothing could have happened. But wait. What about the engagement?
Walter Brennan shines as the town postman, Hector, trying to romance the Dana’s maid. Helen Broderick, Anne Gwynne and Ann Gillis offer fine support to a film everyone in the family will enjoy. Durbin’s voice is lovely here and so is she in this charming slice of Americana. Not just a five-star film for Deanna’s fans, but a five-star film classic, period. show less
The music is beautiful this time out, with Deanna getting to sing everything from the sweet “Beneath the Lights of Home” to the lovely “Love at show more Last” with music and lyrics by Jacques Press and Eddie Cherkose. The songs never seem intrusive here as is so often the case in straight-up musicals, but fit perfectly into the story. They are simply part of a mosaic painted here by director William A. Seiter and producer Joe Pasternak. Vera West dressed Deanna in this film and reminds the viewer that Durbin was everything a girl is supposed to be, and just a bit more.
Deanna is Jane Dana, the quiet daughter of Professor Dana (Robert Benchley). His youngest daughter, Nancy, is boy crazy, and his other daughter, Sylvia, wants to be an actress and takes every opportunity to ham it up. Jane takes care of the rabbits and helps her dad out with his research. He is hoping for a fellowship that will let him expand his work. When a big university sends Richard Calvert (Franchot Tone) to Stillwater to interview Jane’s dad for the grant, things will never be the same.
Jane’s boyfriend, Don (a very young Robert Stack), is so crazy about his car he misses all her signals for romance. When the handsome Richard appears on the scene, all three sisters descend on him like bees to a pot of honey. Young Nancy’s attempts to seem older are a hoot, but Jane has the inside track when she borrows Don’s car and in order to play seductress. But Jane has a small-town heart, rather than a sophisticated one, and Richard has no designs on taking advantage of her; though those gowns by Vera West make it tempting.
Franchot Tone worked well opposite Durbin on more than one occasion, and is terrific here. His on-screen rapport with Durbin is quite pleasing. Once Jane returns home and the whole town knows the 5-cent scandal, she tries to save face when Don just assumes that nothing could have happened. But wait. What about the engagement?
Walter Brennan shines as the town postman, Hector, trying to romance the Dana’s maid. Helen Broderick, Anne Gwynne and Ann Gillis offer fine support to a film everyone in the family will enjoy. Durbin’s voice is lovely here and so is she in this charming slice of Americana. Not just a five-star film for Deanna’s fans, but a five-star film classic, period. show less
Though this film has its detractors — because of its mishmash of styles — it remains a fun and funny crime caper with a nice cast and plenty of South-of-the-border flavor. William A. Seiter’s Borderline is a nifty little film that has more in common with The Big Steal than the noir films it is often advertised as, which leads to some of the disappointment experienced by viewers, in my opinion. Its blend of humor, crime and fun grows on you more and more, until its snappy ending.
It show more seems both the LAPD. and United States Treasury Customs wants to stop a dope smuggling ring bringing narcotics across the border from Mexico. Claire Trevor is the enthusiastic if green LA cop Madeline Haley, a former O.S.S. agent who talks her way into the assignment in an attempt to get information on the nasty middleman Pete Ritche, hoping it will lead them to Mr. Big. TV’s Perry Mason, Raymond Burr, is the heavy in the white suit, Ritche, and he plays the role with relish.
Madeline sort of stumbles into Ritchie but before she can find anything out, Johnny Mackland, an unknown player working from the LA end of the connection, hijacks Ritchie’s gold so he can make a deal for the next shipment. He ends up taking Madeline with him after the guns are drawn and then the fun chase across Mexico is on. As they try to avoid Ritchie and elude the cops it is a lot of fun for the viewer, which includes some tall tells told along the way. A cop who doesn’t know the other one is a cop makes for some fun situations.
This one is sort of a fun pulp film, with more flavor than a habanero pepper, Trevor gives a cute performance as she begins to like Johnny, even getting a bit jealous of the oh-so-friendly young and pretty daughter of a not-too-smart Mexican cop. Of course each regrets having to tun the other one in if they make it out alive, because in true movie fashion, they’ve fallen for each other.
A rousing shoot-out with Ritchie and his gang climaxes a great ending to this very fun to watch film meant as pure entertainment, rather than an artsy example of any one genre. This film doesn’t take itself too seriously, and neither should you. show less
It show more seems both the LAPD. and United States Treasury Customs wants to stop a dope smuggling ring bringing narcotics across the border from Mexico. Claire Trevor is the enthusiastic if green LA cop Madeline Haley, a former O.S.S. agent who talks her way into the assignment in an attempt to get information on the nasty middleman Pete Ritche, hoping it will lead them to Mr. Big. TV’s Perry Mason, Raymond Burr, is the heavy in the white suit, Ritche, and he plays the role with relish.
Madeline sort of stumbles into Ritchie but before she can find anything out, Johnny Mackland, an unknown player working from the LA end of the connection, hijacks Ritchie’s gold so he can make a deal for the next shipment. He ends up taking Madeline with him after the guns are drawn and then the fun chase across Mexico is on. As they try to avoid Ritchie and elude the cops it is a lot of fun for the viewer, which includes some tall tells told along the way. A cop who doesn’t know the other one is a cop makes for some fun situations.
This one is sort of a fun pulp film, with more flavor than a habanero pepper, Trevor gives a cute performance as she begins to like Johnny, even getting a bit jealous of the oh-so-friendly young and pretty daughter of a not-too-smart Mexican cop. Of course each regrets having to tun the other one in if they make it out alive, because in true movie fashion, they’ve fallen for each other.
A rousing shoot-out with Ritchie and his gang climaxes a great ending to this very fun to watch film meant as pure entertainment, rather than an artsy example of any one genre. This film doesn’t take itself too seriously, and neither should you. show less
2024 movie #71. 1948. Dept. store window dresser (Walker) kisses Venus statue which then turns into Ava Gardner! Hijinks ensue. Silly romantic comedy (with some musical numbers) but it had its moments. Eve Arden was, as usual, pretty funny as the store owner's put upon secretary.
The Marx Brothers can't pay their hotel bill.
2.5/4 (Okay).
It doesn't have many laughs, but it's pleasant enough to watch.
(May 2021)
2.5/4 (Okay).
It doesn't have many laughs, but it's pleasant enough to watch.
(May 2021)
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Statistics
- Works
- 60
- Also by
- 12
- Members
- 509
- Popularity
- #48,720
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 11
- ISBNs
- 33














