Comedy

No Lady

-

A henpecked husband takes his wife and her children to Blackpool, where confusion reigns.

Release Date : 1931-05-05

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company :

Production Country :

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Lupino Lane

Character Name : Mr Pog

Original Name : Lupino Lane

Gender : Male

Lola Hunt

Character Name : Mrs Pog

Original Name : Lola Hunt

Gender : Male

Sari Maritza

Character Name : Greta Gherkinski

Original Name : Sari Maritza

Gender : Female

Wallace Lupino

Character Name : Ptomanian Ptough

Original Name : Wallace Lupino

Gender : Male

Cyril McLaglen

Character Name : Ptomanian Ptough

Original Name : Cyril McLaglen

Gender : Male

Charles Stone

Character Name :

Original Name : Charles Stone

Gender : Male

Roy Carey

Character Name : Pat Pog Jr.

Original Name : Roy Carey

Gender : Male

A. George Smith

Character Name :

Original Name : A. George Smith

Gender : Male

Sam Lee

Character Name :

Original Name : Sam Lee

Gender : Male

Herman Darewski

Character Name : And His Blackpool Tower Band

Original Name : Herman Darewski

Gender : Male

Emily Bailey

Character Name : Nellie

Original Name : Emily Bailey

Gender : Male

Florence Dryden

Character Name : Flo

Original Name : Florence Dryden

Gender : Male

Daniel Rowles

Character Name : Dan

Original Name : Daniel Rowles

Gender : Male

Roy Torley

Character Name : Roy

Original Name : Roy Torley

Gender : Male

Florence Woodgate

Character Name : Ninette

Original Name : Florence Woodgate

Gender : Male

Denis O'Neil

Character Name : Singer

Original Name : Denis O'Neil

Gender : Male

Reviews

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2024-01-28

"Pog" (Lupino Lane) is the rather hen-pecked patriarch of a family who heads off to the seaside with his wife and offspring for their annual summer holiday. Once there, he is mistaken for a criminal mastermind and is soon embroiled in the nefarious activities of a gang of spies and crooks. Can he extricate himself from their dastardly schemes? Essentially, this is vehicle for a stage and silent film star who looks completely ill-at-ease in front of a camera into which, this time, he is expected to speak. The drama itself is the thinnest and the familial malarkey with wife (Lola Hunt) and the celebration of Britons on deckchairs wearing bowler hats eating ice cream comes across more scathing than ridiculous. There's some room for a bit of uncomplicated drag, and even some aeronautical antics at the end but this is really only watchable now as a curio of what we watched almost a century ago, what made us laugh and who tickled our fancy.