An estranged wife shows up after a nearly 7 year disappearance to prevent her husband from marrying his new love, and someone kills her.An estranged wife shows up after a nearly 7 year disappearance to prevent her husband from marrying his new love, and someone kills her.An estranged wife shows up after a nearly 7 year disappearance to prevent her husband from marrying his new love, and someone kills her.
Jack George
- Apartment House Manager
- (uncredited)
Charles King
- Beach Cop
- (uncredited)
Frank Mayo
- Coroner
- (uncredited)
Harold Miller
- Nightclub Dance Extra
- (uncredited)
Jerome Root
- Bill
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis film's earliest documented telecasts took place in New York City Thursday 24 March 1949 on WCBS (Channel 2), and in Los Angeles Friday 23 December 1949 on KTTV (Channel 11).
- Quotes
Woman at club: [after having her picture taken at the 711 Club, a woman complains] , Oh, I had my mouth open.
Woman at club: [Her husband responds] That's something new?
- ConnectionsReferenced in Why Women Kill: The Lady Confesses (2021)
Featured review
The Lady Confesses doesn't have a lot going for it, except for plot, and even that's pretty hackneyed. But it's foolish to expect more from a 64-minute cheapie from Producers Releasing Corporation starring Mary Beth Hughes and Hugh Beaumont (later to grasp immortality as The Beaver's dad). Nonetheless, there have been worse programmers.
After a seven year absence (unexplained to us), Beaumont's wife suddenly shows up, putting the kibosh on his plans to marry Hughes. Soon after her return, alas, she's found garotted. Beaumont, the prime suspect, has an alibi: he was passed out in the dressing room of a nightclub singer. Hughes, in the plucky style of the 40s, cops a job as a roving photographer in the club to dig up clues. What she turns up, however, brings her into peril....
The Lady Confesses has been called noir by virtue of its era and its setting, but it's really more of a quick-and-dirty mystery thriller with its roots in the previous decade. The director, Sam Newfield, started out in silents and directed a whole passel of forgettable Westerns before catching up with the emerging noir style of the post-war years. He retains the dubious distinction of having directed Beaumont in nine films.
After a seven year absence (unexplained to us), Beaumont's wife suddenly shows up, putting the kibosh on his plans to marry Hughes. Soon after her return, alas, she's found garotted. Beaumont, the prime suspect, has an alibi: he was passed out in the dressing room of a nightclub singer. Hughes, in the plucky style of the 40s, cops a job as a roving photographer in the club to dig up clues. What she turns up, however, brings her into peril....
The Lady Confesses has been called noir by virtue of its era and its setting, but it's really more of a quick-and-dirty mystery thriller with its roots in the previous decade. The director, Sam Newfield, started out in silents and directed a whole passel of forgettable Westerns before catching up with the emerging noir style of the post-war years. He retains the dubious distinction of having directed Beaumont in nine films.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 4 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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