Min and Bill | |
---|---|
Directed by | George W. Hill |
Written by | Frances Marion Marion Jackson |
Based on | Dark Star 1929 novel by Lorna Moon |
Produced by | George W. Hill Harry Rapf |
Starring | Marie Dressler Wallace Beery |
Cinematography | Harold Wenstrom |
Edited by | Basil Wrangell |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release date |
|
Running time | 66 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $2 million[1] |
Min and Bill is a 1930 American pre-Code comedy-drama film, directed by George W. Hill and starring Marie Dressler and Wallace Beery. Adapted by Frances Marion and Marion Jackson from Lorna Moon's 1929 novel Dark Star, the film tells the story of dockside innkeeper Min's tribulations as she tries to protect the innocence of her adopted daughter, Nancy, while loving and fighting with boozy fisherman Bill, who resides at the inn. The picture was a runaway hit. In 1931, the studio released a Spanish-language version of Min and Bill, La fruta amarga,[2] directed by Arthur Gregor and starring Virginia Fábregas and Juan de Landa.[3]
Min and Bill stars Dressler (Min), Beery (Bill), Dorothy Jordan (Nancy), and Marjorie Rambeau (Bella, Nancy's disreputable mother). Dressler won the Academy Award for Best Actress in 1931 for her performance in this film.[4] Beery received the Academy Award for Best Actor in 1931 for playing the title role in The Champ, which “fully vaulted him from character player to genuine movie star.”[5]
Beery became MGM's highest-paid actor in the early 1930s, before Clark Gable took over that crown; Beery had a clause in his 1932 contract that he be paid a dollar per year more than any other actor on the lot.[citation needed]
In 1933, the studio teamed Dressler and Beery as a married couple in Tugboat Annie, which was also a huge success. In 1933, Dressler topped Quigley Publications' annual Top Ten Money Making Stars Poll of movie exhibitors in 1931 and 1932.[6] She died of cancer in July 1934.[7]