Crown v. Stevens
Crown v. Stevens is a 1936 British crime thriller film directed by Michael Powell, starring Beatrix Thomson and Patric Knowles and featuring Glennis Lorimer and Googie Withers. It was made as a "quota quickie", a film made to fulfill a legal requirement at the time that a certain percentage of films shown in British movie theatres be made in the U.K. by British personnel.
Plot
Ex-dancer Doris Stevens kills a moneylender who is pressing her for settlement of her debt and threatening to tell her respectable businessman husband. Chris Jensen, who also owes money sees her there but does not report her. After she leaves, he burns pages from the moneylender's ledger which listed his debt. Later, Jensen finds out the woman is his employer's wife. He later accidentally intervenes when Doris attempts to murder her dull and stingy husband. When her husband is saved from dying, she admits her guilt and is taken away by the police.Cast
- Beatrix Thomson as Doris Stevens, a former music hall dancer, now wife of Arthur Stevens
- Patric Knowles as Chris Jensen, an employee of Arthur Stevens
- Glennis Lorimer as Miss Molly Hobbes, an interior decorator
- Reginald Purdell as Alf, Stevens' foreman
- Allan Jeayes as Inspector Carter
- Frederick Piper as Arthur Stevens, a businessman
- Googie Withers as Ella Levine, Doris' friend, another former dancer
- Mabel Poulton as Mamie, a grifter who steals an unpaid-for ring given to her by Chris Jensem
- Billy Watts as Joe Andrews, a grifter, boyfriend of Mamie '
- Davina Craig as Maggie, the Stevens' maid '
- Morris Harvey as Maurice Bayleck, a moneylender
- Bernard Miles as Detective Wells ''''