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My Dear Miss Aldrich is a 1937 American comedy drama film directed by George B. Seitz and starring Maureen O'Sullivan, Walter Pidgeon, and Edna May Oliver about a young woman who inherits a New York City newspaper and decides to become a reporter rather than a publisher.
My Dear Miss Aldrich: Directed by George B. Seitz. With Edna May Oliver, Maureen O'Sullivan, Walter Pidgeon, Rita Johnson. When the owner of the New York Globe-Leader dies without making a will, the paper is inherited by his only living relative, an "old maid schoolteacher" from Nebraska.
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- Comedy, Drama, Romance
- George B. Seitz
- 1937-09-17
Film Details. Articles & Reviews. Notes. Brief Synopsis. A glamorous woman takes over a newspaper and clashes with the editor. Cast & Crew. Read More. George B. Seitz. Director. Edna May Oliver. Mrs. [Lou] Atherton. Maureen O'sullivan. Martha Aldrich. Walter Pidgeon. Ken Morley. Rita Johnson. Ellen Warfield. Janet Beecher. Mrs. Sinclair.
- George B. Seitz, E. J. Babille
- Edna May Oliver
David Snell. Cinematography. Charles Lawton Jr. (B&W) Producer. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) Genre. Comedy. Drama | Journalism. Synopsis. When the owner of the New York Globe-Leader dies without making a will, the paper is inherited by his only living relative, an "old maid schoolteacher" from Nebraska.
- Charles Lawton Jr. (B&W)
- George B. Seitz
- United States
- Comedy. Drama | Journalism
MY DEAR MISS ALDRICH. Directed by. George B. Seitz. United States, 1937. Comedy, Drama. 74. Synopsis. When the owner of the New York Globe-Leader dies without making a will, the paper is inherited by his only living relative, an “old maid schoolteacher” from Nebraska, Martha Aldrich. Synopsis.
A Nebraska schoolteacher (Maureen O'Sullivan) inherits a New York daily and tells her managing editor (Walter Pidgeon) how to run it.
- Comedy
Martha Aldrich (O'Sullivan) is an advocate for women's rights and also a teacher. When she inherits a New York City newspaper, she and her aunt (Oliver) head for New York. There they meet the chauvinistic editor Ken Morley (Pidgeon) who has never had a woman on staff.