It's a King
1933 film
- Paul England
- Claude Hulbert
- Bert Lee
- Jack Marks
- R. P. Weston
- Sydney Howard
- Joan Maude
- Cecil Humphreys
- Cyril Bristow
- Freddie Young
- Lew Stone
- Harris Weston
Production
company
company
British and Dominions
Release date
- 1933 (1933)
Running time
It's a King is a 1933 British comedy film directed by Jack Raymond and starring Sydney Howard, Joan Maude and Cecil Humphreys.[1] It was made at Elstree Studios by the producer Herbert Wilcox's British and Dominions company.[2]
Plot
Farce in which insurance agent Albert King is discovered to be the exact double of the king of Helgia, and even has his name in reverse (King Albert). Insurance man Albert enjoys a romance with a princess, before finally saving the King from assassination by anarchists.
Cast
- Sydney Howard as Albert King / King Albert
- Joan Maude as Princess Yasma
- Cecil Humphreys as Count Yendoff
- George De Warfaz as Colonel Brandt
- Arthur Goullet as Leader
- Franklyn Bellamy as Salvatore
- Bela Berkes as himself
- Lew Stone as himself
References
Bibliography
- Low, Rachael. Filmmaking in 1930s Britain. George Allen & Unwin, 1985.
- Wood, Linda. British Films, 1927-1939. British Film Institute, 1986.
External links
- It's a King at IMDb
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The films of Jack Raymond
- A Woman Misunderstood (1921)
- Somehow Good (1927)
- Second to None (1927)
- Zero (1928)
- A Peep Behind the Scenes (1929)
- Splinters (1929)
- French Leave (1930)
- The Great Game (1930)
- Up for the Cup (1931)
- The Speckled Band (1931)
- Tilly of Bloomsbury (1931)
- Almost a Divorce (1931)
- Mischief (1931)
- Life Goes On (1932)
- Say It with Music (1932)
- Up to the Neck (1933)
- Night of the Garter (1933)
- Just My Luck (1933)
- It's a King (1933)
- Sorrell and Son (1934)
- The King of Paris (1934)
- Girls, Please! (1934)
- Where's George? (1935)
- Come Out of the Pantry (1935)
- When Knights Were Bold (1936)
- The Frog (1937)
- The Rat (1937)
- Blondes for Danger (1938)
- No Parking (1938)
- A Royal Divorce (1938)
- The Mind of Mr. Reeder (1939)
- The Missing People (1940)
- You Will Remember (1941)
- Up for the Cup (1950)
- Take Me to Paris (1951)
- Worm's Eye View (1951)
- Reluctant Heroes (1952)
- Little Big Shot (1952)
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