
Top Hat (1935) - IMDb
Top Hat: Directed by Mark Sandrich. With Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, Edward Everett Horton, Erik Rhodes. An American dancer comes to Britain and falls for a model whom he initially …
Top Hat | Musical Comedy, Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers | Britannica
Top Hat, American musical film, released in 1935, that was the first of the 10 films pairing Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers to boast a screenplay written specifically for them. The film was …
Top Hat - Wikiwand
Top Hat is a 1935 American musical comedy film, in which Fred Astaire plays an American tap dancer named Jerry Travers, who arrives in London to star in a show produced by Horace …
Top Hat (1935) - Greatest Films
Top Hat became RKO's greatest box-office hit of the 30s (the moneymaker brought in over $3 million). By its second week (in September 1935), it had broken attendance records at New …
Top Hat | Rotten Tomatoes
A glamorous and enthralling Depression-era diversion, Top Hat is nearly flawless, with acrobatics by Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers that make the hardest physical stunts seem light as air.
Those charms about you … movie review (1935) | Roger Ebert
Oct 23, 2005 · There are two numbers in “Top Hat” where the dancing on the screen reaches such perfection as is attainable. They are by Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers for “Isn’t This a …
Top Hat (1935) - Hollywood's Golden Age
'Top Hat' is a movie musical comedy, made in 1935, directed by Mark Sandrich and starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers with Edward Everett Horton, Erik Rhodes and Helen Broderick.
Top Hat (1935) – Plot, Cast & Trivia | TopMovieList
"Top Hat" is a classic 1935 musical comedy directed by Mark Sandrich that follows the charming and talented dancer Jerry Travers, played by Fred Astaire, as he travels to London to star in a …
Top Hat (1935) - Cast & Crew — The Movie Database (TMDB)
Jerry demonstrates his new dance steps late one night in Horace's hotel room, much to the annoyance of sleeping Dale Tremont below. She goes upstairs to complain and the two are …
While neither the most rhapsodic of their films (that would be “Swing Time”) nor the giddiest (that would be “Follow the Fleet”), “Top Hat” (1935) is the most iconic.