Cavalcade
THE PICTURE OF THE GENERATION!
A cavalcade of English life from New Year's Eve 1899 until 1933 is seen through the eyes of well-to-do Londoners Jane and Robert Marryot. Amongst events touching their family are the Boer War, the death of Queen Victoria, the sinking of the Titanic, and the Great War.
Trailers & Videos

Cavalcade - Clip
Cast

Diana Wynyard
Jane Marryot

Clive Brook
Robert Marryot

Una O'Connor
Ellen Bridges

Herbert Mundin
Alfred Bridges

Beryl Mercer
Cook

Irene Browne
Margaret Harris

Tempe Pigott
Mrs. Snapper

Merle Tottenham
Annie

Frank Lawton
Joe Marryot

Ursula Jeans
Fanny Bridges

Margaret Lindsay
Edith Harris

John Warburton
Edward Marryot

Billy Bevan
George Grainger

Douglas Scott
Master Joey

Bonita Granville
Young Fanny

Betty Grable
Girl on Couch

Desmond Roberts
Ronnie James

Frank Atkinson
Uncle Dick (uncredited)

Lionel Belmore
Uncle George (uncredited)

Ted Billings
Newspaper Peddler (uncredited)
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
Noël Coward is at his most unashamedly jingoistic with this triple-Oscar winning depiction of the lives and loves, trials and tribulations of the well-to-do "Marryot" family - "Jane" (Diana Wynyard) and husband "Robert" (Clive Brook) and of the working class "Bridges" - Herbert Mundin ("Fred") and Una O'Connor ("Ellen") and their respective children. This episodically styled melodrama, for that is largely what it is, straddles the periods of British history from the late 1800s, through the fairly seismic death of Queen Victoria, the ensuing gentile Edwardian era until the clouds of war gather in the early 1910s testing everyone's mettle and finally to the aftermath of the Great War. It proves to be quite an interesting observation of deference and class, of aspiration and resentment - and both O'Connor and Wynyard play their parts well. The rest of it is a bit lacklustre, though - it seems little better than a sentimentally written chronology, bedecked with union jacks and rousing Chopin and Strauss to paper over any attempts to look seriously at the pretty profound social changes occurring in Britain, and elsewhere in Europe over this time period. That it beat Cukor's "Lady for a Day" for the trophy in 1934 has always surprised me - but at least it gave Una O'Connor a chance to stop playing the maid!
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