Lady from Louisiana

DAZZINGLY SET IN THE WORLD'S MOST GLAMOROUS CITY WITH ITS SIDEWALK CAFES...ITS QUAINT, CONTINENTAL ATMOSPHERE...AND ITS MARDI GRAS!

5.3
19411h 22m

Northern lawyer John Reynolds travels to New Orleans to try and clean up the local crime syndicate based around a lottery. Although he meets Julie Mirbeau and they are attracted to each other, the fact that her father heads the lottery means they end up on opposite sides. When her father is killed, Julie becomes more and more involved in the shady activities and in blocking Reynolds' attempts at prosecution.

Production

Logo for Republic Pictures

Cast

Photo of John Wayne

John Wayne

John Reynolds

Photo of Ona Munson

Ona Munson

Julie Mirbeau

Photo of Ray Middleton

Ray Middleton

Blackburn 'Blackie' Williams

Photo of Henry Stephenson

Henry Stephenson

General Anatole Mirbeau

Photo of Helen Westley

Helen Westley

Blanche Brunot

Photo of Jack Pennick

Jack Pennick

Cuffy Brown

Photo of Paul Scardon

Paul Scardon

Judge Wilson

Photo of James C. Morton

James C. Morton

Littlefield

Photo of Stanley Blystone

Stanley Blystone

Lottery Victim

Photo of Al Bridge

Al Bridge

Captain of Police

Photo of Lane Chandler

Lane Chandler

Courtroom Police Officer

Photo of Noble 'Kid' Chissell

Noble 'Kid' Chissell

Lottery Thug (uncredited)

Photo of Heinie Conklin

Heinie Conklin

Lottery Winner

Photo of Gino Corrado

Gino Corrado

Lottery Victim

Photo of Virginia Farmer

Virginia Farmer

Telephone Operator

Photo of Jesse Graves

Jesse Graves

Louis Napoleon, Mirbeau Servant

More Like This

Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

John Wayne ("Reynolds") meets a lady - Ona Munson ("Julie Mirabeau") on a Mississippi river boat heading for New Orleans. When they are met on arrival by the feisty Helen Westley ("Blanche") and the girl's esteemed father Henry Stephenson ("Gen. Mirabeau") we discover all we will need to know: Lawyer Duke has been summoned at the behest of Westley to begin an investigation into the city lottery being run by Stephenson. The General epitomises the almost chivalric society that exists on the surface whilst ensuring that his fellow citizens buy plenty of lottery tickets (willingly or otherwise). When the old gent discovers his right hand man is overstepping the mark, he fires him - that riles "Blackie" (Ray Midddleton) and when, shortly afterwards, young "Julie" suddenly finds herself an orphan she decides to involve herself more in her now late father's "charitable" work and to blame "Reynolds" for his death... It runs a bit to melodrama, this - but there are stronger than usual themes of extortion, bribery and corruption on an pretty grand scale. The ending to the story is pretty predictable, lame even, but there are some cracking storm effects that demonstrate just how easily nature could eradicate even the most substantial structures put in place to protect folks. Stephenson (perhaps not his wobbly accent, so much) is his usual dapper self, there is a bit of fun chemistry between Wayne and Munson but Helen Westley steals this for me as the determined old woman set upon cleaning up her town.

You've reached the end.