Mississippi
0 sources
Mississippi
Summary
Mississippi is a film[1]. Mississippi has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Mississippi's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- Mississippi was directed by A. Edward Sutherland[4].
- Mississippi was directed by Wesley Ruggles[5].
- Claude Binyon wrote the screenplay for Mississippi[6].
- Jack Cunningham wrote the screenplay for Mississippi[7].
- Francis Martin wrote the screenplay for Mississippi[8].
- Mississippi's genre is romantic comedy[9].
- Mississippi's genre is musical film[10].
- A cast member of Mississippi was Bing Crosby[11].
- A cast member of Mississippi was W. C. Fields[12].
- A cast member of Mississippi was Joan Bennett[13].
- A cast member of Mississippi was Gail Patrick[14].
- A cast member of Mississippi was Claude Gillingwater[15].
- A cast member of Mississippi was Paul Hurst[16].
- A cast member of Mississippi was King Baggot[17].
- A cast member of Mississippi was J. P. McGowan[18].
- A cast member of Mississippi was Victor Potel[19].
- A cast member of Mississippi was Ann Sheridan[20].
- A cast member of Mississippi was Jerome Storm[21].
- A cast member of Mississippi was Mabel Van Buren[22].
- A cast member of Mississippi was Charles King[23].
- A cast member of Mississippi was Fred Kohler[24].
- A cast member of Mississippi was John Miljan[25].
- A cast member of Mississippi was Mahlon Hamilton[26].
- A cast member of Mississippi was Queenie Smith[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Directors include A. Edward Sutherland[4] and Wesley Ruggles[5]. Screenwriters include Claude Binyon[6], Jack Cunningham[7], and Francis Martin[8]. Cast members include Bing Crosby[11], W. C. Fields[12], Joan Bennett[13], Gail Patrick[14], Claude Gillingwater[15], and Paul Hurst[16].
Publication
Mississippi was published on January 1, 1935[28]. The original language of Mississippi was English[29]. Genres include romantic comedy[9] and musical film[10].
Why It Matters
Mississippi has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]