Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. The Love Parade is a 1929 American pre-Code musical comedy film, directed by Ernst Lubitsch and starring Maurice Chevalier and Jeanette MacDonald, involving the marital difficulties of Queen Louise of Sylvania (MacDonald) and her consort, Count Alfred Renard (Chevalier).

  2. The Love Parade: Directed by Ernst Lubitsch. With Maurice Chevalier, Jeanette MacDonald, Lupino Lane, Lillian Roth. The queen of mythical Sylvania marries a courtier, who finds his new life unsatisfying.

  3. The Love Parade. by. Ernst Lubitsch. Publication date. 1929-11-19. Topics. Maurice Chevalier, Jeanette MacDonald, Lupino Lane, Lillian Roth, Eugene Pallette, E.H. Calvert, Edgar Norton, Lionel Belmore, Russ Powell, Carl Stockdale, Albert Roccardi, Anton Vaverka, Albert De Winton, William von Hardenburg, Margaret Fealy, Virginia Bruce, Josephine ...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Love_ParadeLove Parade - Wikipedia

    The Love Parade ( German: Loveparade) was an electronic dance music festival and technoparade that originated in 1989 in West Berlin, Germany. [1] . It was held annually in Berlin from 1989 to 2003 and in 2006, then from 2007 to 2010 in the Ruhr region. Events scheduled for 2004 and 2005 in Berlin and for 2009 in Bochum were canceled.

  5. The Love Parade. Ernst Lubitsch’s first "talking picture" was also Hollywood's first movie musical to integrate songs with narrative. Additionally, The Love Parade made stars out of toast-of-Paris Maurice Chevalier and girl-from-Philly Jeanette MacDonald, cast as a womanizing military attaché and the man-hungry queen of "Sylvania."

  6. In the modern kingdom of Sylvania, the aged cabinet ministers worry over the fact that Queen Louise is unmarried. Then emissary Count Alfred returns in disgrace from Paris, where he has carried on numerous affairs with young ladies, and learning of his escapades, the queen invites him to demonstrate his romantic prowess.

  7. Aug 17, 2010 · The Love Parade was nominated for the Best Picture Oscar, but it lost to All Quiet on the Western Front and Lubitsch lost the Best Director statuette to Lewis Milestone. He was not nominated again until 1943, for Heaven Can Wait —another fantasy, albeit without songs.