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Louisa (1950)

6.1 | May 31, 1950 (US) | Comedy, Romance | 01:30

The funniest thing that ever happened to a family!

Architect Hal Norton and wife Meg invite his widowed mother Louisa to move in with them, only to discover the sweet elderly lady is romantically involved with what seems to be every old coot in town.

Featured Crew

Director
Art Direction
Makeup Artist
Producer
Screenplay, Story
Costume Design
Hairstylist
Set Decoration

Cast

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Ronald Reagan
Hal Norton
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Ruth Hussey
Meg Norton
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Spring Byington
Louisa Norton
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Charles Coburn
Mr. Burnside
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Edmund Gwenn
Mr. Hammond
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Piper Laurie
Cathy Norton
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Scotty Beckett
Jimmy Blake
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Jimmy Hunt
Chris Norton
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Willard Waterman
Dick Stewart

Reviews

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CinemaSerf
7 | Dec 27, 2022
Despite the name at the top of the billing, this film belongs fairly and squarely to the elderly folks - Spring Byington ("Louisa"), Edmund Gwenn ("Hammond") and Charles Coburn ("Burnside"). Both men are vying for the affections of the former - the mother of aspiring architect "Hal" (Ronald Reagan). The story moves along quickly and amusingly with the two resorting to more increasingly outlandish methods to secure the hand of "Louisa". Meantime, their antics are playing havoc on her son and on his family with whom she lives. Though the ending is a bit far-fetched, the joke still holds up remarkably well. Reagan portrays the role of the increasingly frenetic son quite effusively and the family of supporting cast - including Piper Laurie and Scotty Beckett who are having their own relationship issues - all contribute well to this enjoyable story that clearly validates the theory that life begins at 50, or 60, or....