Air Hostess | |
---|---|
Directed by | Albert S. Rogell |
Written by | Milton Raison (adaptation) |
Screenplay by | Milton Raison Keene Thompson |
Story by | Grace Perkins (uncredited) |
Produced by | Martin Johnson Osa Johnson |
Starring | Evalyn Knapp James Murray Arthur Pierson |
Cinematography | Joseph Walker Elmer Dyer (aerial scenes) |
Edited by | Richard Cahoon |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 67 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Air Hostess is a 1933 American Pre-Code aviation-themed melodrama based on a serial published in a 1919 True Story Magazine article called Air Hostess by Grace Perkins, also known as Dora Macy.[Note 1] Director Albert Rogell who had moved from shorts to B-films, had been interested in aviation having already helmed a similar feature, The Flying Marine (1929). In Air Hostess, the studio had attempted to merge flying and romance. Advertising stressed, "A date in the skies ... a rendezvous in the heavens...where love zooms with thrill after thrill ... but finds a happy landing!"[2][3][4]
Evalyn Knapp plays a TWA air hostess attracted to a grandstanding pilot, despite the better advice of the blind mechanic and other employees who watch over her.[4]) Knapp was being touted as a future star, with a starring role in Sinners' Holiday (1930), but eventually lost her A-status and was relegated to such B-fare as Air Hostess.[citation needed]
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