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The Prince and the Pauper Poster

The Prince and the Pauper

Mark Twain's Immortal Classic !
1937 | 118m | English

(3104 votes)

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Popularity: 4 (history)

Details

Two boys – the prince Edward and the pauper Tom – are born on the same day. Years later, when young teenage Tom sneaks into the palace garden, he meets the prince. They change clothes with one another before the guards discover them and throw out the prince thinking he's the urchin. No one believes them when they try to tell the truth about which is which. Soon after, the old king dies and the prince will inherit the throne.
Release Date: Apr 30, 1937
Director: William Keighley
Writer: Mark Twain, Laird Doyle
Genres: Family, Fantasy, Adventure, Drama
Keywords slum, based on novel or book, prince, guard, tudor, deception, impersonation, doppelgänger, henry viii, 16th century, british monarchy
Production Companies Warner Bros. Pictures, First National Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 02, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

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International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Errol Flynn Miles Hendon
Claude Rains Earl of Hertford
Henry Stephenson Duke of Norfolk
Barton MacLane John Canty
Billy Mauch Tom Canty
Robert J. Mauch Prince Edward
Alan Hale Captain of the Guard
Eric Portman First Lord
Lionel Pape Second Lord
Leonard Willey Third Lord
Murray Kinnell Hugo
Halliwell Hobbes Archbishop
Phyllis Barry Barmaid
Ivan F. Simpson Clemens
Montagu Love Henry VIII
Fritz Leiber Father Andrew
Elspeth Dudgeon Grandmother Canty
Mary Field Mrs. Canty
Forrester Harvey Meaty Man
Joan Valerie Lady Jane Seymour
Lester Matthews St. John
Robert Adair First Guard
Harry Cording Second Guard
Robert Warwick Lord Warwick
Rex Evans Rich Man
Holmes Herbert First Doctor
Ian Maclaren Second Doctor
Anne Howard Lady Jane Grey
Gwendolyn Jones Lady Elizabeth
Lionel Braham Ruffler
Harry Beresford The Watch
Lionel Belmore Innkeeper
Ian Wolfe Proprietor
William Ripley Dorr Choir (as St. Luke's Choristers)
John George Beggar
Eric Snowden Cockney
Name Job
William Keighley Director
Mark Twain Novel
Laird Doyle Screenplay
Sol Polito Director of Photography
Robert M. Haas Art Direction
Milo Anderson Costume Design
Ralph Dawson Editor
Leo F. Forbstein Music Director
Erich Wolfgang Korngold Original Music Composer
Name Title
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 9 13 7
2024 5 13 19 5
2024 6 9 15 5
2024 7 11 18 5
2024 8 8 14 5
2024 9 8 17 4
2024 10 8 19 4
2024 11 6 14 4
2024 12 7 15 3
2025 1 6 10 4
2025 2 4 9 1
2025 3 3 5 1
2025 4 2 3 1
2025 5 2 3 1
2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 0 1 0
2025 8 1 3 0
2025 9 3 7 2
2025 10 3 5 2

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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

So Henry VIII finally has his beloved son - the Prince Edward whom he protects at all costs. All the walls and guards, though, don't stop the wandering urchin "Tom Canty" from getting into his apartment. The two boys chat and decide it might be a bit of fun to swap clothes as the King is throwing a ... fancy dress party that night. Their roles now reversed, the wrong boy now comes a cropper at the hands of his own guards and is turfed out leaving "Tom" to fill some rather luxurious britches. Despite his protestations that he's not the Prince, he isn't believed - not even by his own ailing father (Montagu Love) - a fact that the scheming Hertford (Claude Rains) plays to his full advantage when the king dies and he gets himself appointed the Lord Protector. If "Tom" thinks he's having it bad, just wait and see what the real Prince is having to deal with. Clad in rags and proclaiming his true status, everyone just thinks he's a bit bonkers. About to get a sound beating, he is saved by soldier of fortune "Miles Hendon" (Errol Flynn) who takes the boy under his wing. Initially, he's no more convinced about the tales of royalty either, but gradually he begins to believe and together they have to find a way to stop the coronation before the wrong boy is crowned and Hertford lops of the head of the Duke of Norfolk (Henry Stephenson) and rules the roost. Now, the pair have quite a few adventures and along the way the boy realises some of the iniquities of his kingdom, vowing that he will be a better king if he ever gets the chance. Will he? Flynn is on good form here but it's really the two Mauch twins - Robert is the Prince and Billy is the pauper, who steal the show. They look like they are having good fun playing their way through parts that were probably every boy's dream. Eric Portman and Alan Hale pop up now and again too and there's precisely no romance at all to clutter up the swash, buckle, duplicity and entertainment. It's one of Mark Twain's better stores, I think, and this is the best version made for the silver screen.

Jul 18, 2024