Lady Oscar
0 sources
Lady Oscar
Summary
Lady Oscar is a film[1]. It ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (606 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Lady Oscar's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- Lady Oscar was directed by Jacques Demy[4].
- Jacques Demy wrote the screenplay for Lady Oscar[5].
- Patricia Louisianna Knop wrote the screenplay for Lady Oscar[6].
- Lady Oscar's composer is recorded as Michel Legrand[7].
- Lady Oscar's genre is drama film[8].
- Lady Oscar's genre is romance film[9].
- Lady Oscar's genre is yuri[10].
- Lady Oscar's genre is LGBTQ-related film[11].
- Lady Oscar's based on is recorded as The Rose of Versailles[12].
- A cast member of Lady Oscar was Catriona MacColl[13].
- A cast member of Lady Oscar was Barry Stokes[14].
- A cast member of Lady Oscar was Christine Böhm[15].
- A cast member of Lady Oscar was Georges Wilson[16].
- A cast member of Lady Oscar was Martin Potter[17].
- A cast member of Lady Oscar was Caroline Loeb[18].
- A cast member of Lady Oscar was Lambert Wilson[19].
- A cast member of Lady Oscar was Lyne Catherine Jeanne Chardonnet[20].
- A cast member of Lady Oscar was Mike Marshall[21].
- A cast member of Lady Oscar was Patrick Floersheim[22].
- A cast member of Lady Oscar was Patsy Kensit[23].
- A cast member of Lady Oscar was Jonas Bergström[24].
- A cast member of Lady Oscar was Mark Kingston[25].
- A cast member of Lady Oscar was Susan Margery-Jeaffreson-Lloyd[26].
- A cast member of Lady Oscar was Christopher Ellison[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Lady Oscar was produced by Mataichirō Yamamoto[28]. It was directed by Jacques Demy[4]. Screenwriters include Jacques Demy[5] and Patricia Louisianna Knop[6]. Cast members include Catriona MacColl[13], Barry Stokes[14], Christine Böhm[15], Georges Wilson[16], Martin Potter[17], and Caroline Loeb[18].
Publication
Publication dates include March 3, 1979[29], April 26, 1980[30], October 24, 1981[31], December 15, 1983[32], and November 20, 1979[33]. The original language of Lady Oscar was English[34]. Genres include drama film[8], romance film[9], yuri[10], and LGBTQ-related film[11]. Recorded distribution format include direct-to-video[35] and video on demand[36].
Why It Matters
Lady Oscar ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (606 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[37]