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The Best Things in Life Are Free | |
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Directed by | Michael Curtiz |
Screenplay by | William Bowers Phoebe Ephron Frank Tashlin (uncredited) |
Story by | John O'Hara |
Produced by | Henry Ephron |
Starring | Gordon MacRae Dan Dailey Ernest Borgnine Sheree North Tommy Noonan Murvyn Vye Phyllis Avery Larry Keating Tony Galento Norman Brooks |
Cinematography | Leon Shamroy |
Edited by | Dorothy Spencer |
Music by | Lionel Newman |
Production company | |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date |
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Running time | 104 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $1.16 million[1] |
Box office | $2.7 million |
The Best Things in Life Are Free is a 1956 American musical film directed by Michael Curtiz. The film stars Gordon MacRae, Dan Dailey, and Ernest Borgnine as the real-life songwriting team of Buddy DeSylva, Lew Brown, and Ray Henderson of the late 1920s and early 1930s, and Sheree North as Kitty Kane, a singer (possibly based on Helen Kane).
In 1957, the year after the film was released, it received an Oscar nomination for Lionel Newman in the category of Best Music, Scoring of a Musical Picture.
This article needs a plot summary. (March 2022) |
Premiering in September 1956, The Best Things in Life Are Free was met with mixed reviews. Some reviews[citation needed] called it "the biggest new musical this year"[citation needed] and others "a musical-comedy that could've been produced on a higher budget with bigger and better production numbers".[citation needed]
Being a musical, though a modestly produced one, the movie was fairly expensive to produce. The film ended with a budget of $2.86 million and made just over $4 million at the box office, earning $2,250,000 in North American rentals in 1956.[2]