She Shall Have Murder
1950 British film
- Guido Coen
- Derrick De Marney
- Rosamund John
- Derrick De Marney
Production
companies
companies
- Derrick De Marney Productions (as Concanen)
- British Lion Films (in association with)
Release date
- December 1950 (1950-12)
Running time
She Shall Have Murder is a 1950 British drama film directed by Daniel Birt and starring Rosamund John, Derrick De Marney and Felix Aylmer.[1] The screenplay concerns a law office clerk who becomes a detective.
Premise
A law office clerk who aspires to be a crime writer, turns into a detective when someone at her work is murdered.[1]
Cast
- Rosamund John as Jane Hamish
- Derrick De Marney as Dagobert Brown
- Mary Jerrold as Mrs. Robjohn
- Felix Aylmer as Mr. Playfair
- Joyce Heron as Rosemary Proctor
- Jack Allen as Maj. Stewart
- Henryetta Edwards as Sarah Swinburne
- Harry Fowler as Albert Oates
- John Bentley as Douglas Robjohn
- Beatrice Varley as Mrs. Hawthorne
- June Elvin as Barbara Jennings
- Jack McNaughton as Barman
- Olaf Pooley as Mr. White
- Dennis Val Norton as Pub Landlord
- Francis de Wolff as Police Inspector
- Jonathan Field as Darts Player
- Jimmy Rhodes as Racing Man
- Tony Hilton as Steward
- Frances Leak as Shooting Gallery Attendant
- Wanda Rands s Change Girl
- Duncan Lamont as Police Sergeant
References
- ^ a b "She Shall Have Murder". Archived from the original on 13 January 2009. Retrieved 7 July 2015.
External links
- She Shall Have Murder at IMDb
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The films of Daniel Birt
- The Three Weird Sisters (1948)
- No Room at the Inn (1948)
- The Interrupted Journey (1949)
- She Shall Have Murder (1950)
- The Night Won't Talk (1952)
- Circumstantial Evidence (1952)
- Background (1953)
- Three Steps in the Dark (1953)
- Meet Mr. Malcolm (1954)
- Third Party Risk (1954)
- Burnt Evidence (1954)
- Laughing in the Sunshine (1956)
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