Happy Is the Bride
Happy Is the Bride – 1957 | 85 mins | Comedy | B&W
Plot Synopsis

Directed by co-scriptwriter Roy Boulting, this hectic comedy with delightful cameos by the likes of Cecil Parker, Terry-Thomas and Joyce Grenfell was a remake of Anthony Asquith‘s Quiet Wedding (1940). It seems a romantic idyll when David (Ian (Carmichael) proposes to Janet (Janette Scott) during a cricket match. But when the wedding is announced, Janet’s parents (Cecil Parker, Edith Sharpe) take over and proceed to cause chaos with their well-intentioned interfering. Aunt Florence (Joyce Grenfell) forecasts disaster. Janet’s sister (Virginia Maskell) arrives, claiming to have left her husband. Janet and David try to escape by embarking on a long car journey, but he is arrested for a driving offence, and a police car takes them to their wedding.
Production Team
Roy Boulting: Director
Albert Witherick: Art Direction
Edward Scaife: Cinematography
Anthony Harvey: Editing
Benjamin Frankel: Original Music
Paul Soskin: Producer
Roy Boulting: Script
Jeffrey Dell: Script
Cast
Ian Carmichael: David Chaytor
Janette Scott: Janet Royd
Cecil Parker: Arthur Royd
Joyce Grenfell: Aunt Florence
Eric Barker: Vicar
Edith Sharpe: Mildred Royd
Elvi Hale: Petula
John Le Mesurier: Chaytor
Nicholas Parsons: John Royd
Virginia Maskell: Marcia
Thorley Walters: Jim
Irene Handl: Mme Edna
Miles Malleson: Magistrate







