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  1. The Shopworn Angel is a 1938 American drama film directed by H. C. Potter and starring James Stewart, Margaret Sullavan, and Walter Pidgeon. The MGM release featured the second screen pairing of Margaret Sullavan and James Stewart following their successful teaming in the Universal Pictures production Next Time We Love two years earlier.

  2. The Shopworn Angel: Directed by H.C. Potter. With Margaret Sullavan, James Stewart, Walter Pidgeon, Hattie McDaniel. Shortly after the United States enters World War I in 1917, a Broadway actress agrees to let a naive soldier court her in order to impress his friends, but a real romance soon begins.

    • (1.7K)
    • Drama, Romance
    • H.C. Potter
    • 1938-07-15
  3. Shopworn Angel, The - (Original Trailer) A showgirl (Margaret Sullavan) gives up life in the fast line for a young soldier (James Stewart) on his way to fight World War I in The Shopworn Angel (1938).

    • H. C. Potter, Edward Woehler
    • Margaret Sullavan
  4. The chemistry that Margaret Sullavan and James Stewart would lift to exquisite heights in The Shop Around the Corner is on earlier display in this tender romance scripted by Waldo Salt...

  5. The Shopworn Angel. A worldly Broadway actress (Margaret Sullavan) lets a folksy doughboy (James Stewart) court her and marries him before he ships out. Content collapsed. Rent The Shopworn...

    • (77)
    • H. C. Potter
    • Romance
    • Margaret Sullavan
  6. Shortly after the United States enters World War I in 1917, a Broadway actress agrees to let a naive soldier court her in order to impress his friends, but a real romance soon begins. During WWI Bill Pettigrew, a naive young Texan soldier is sent to New York for basic training.

  7. Apr 13, 2021 · Shopworn Angel was reborn as a relic of the Pre-Code era meant for a fresh take with one of its icons, Jean Harlow, who died tragically in 1937. Instead, it got retrofitted with a new cast, including Sullavan, and toned down its content to appease the norms of the late ’30s, bleedings into the ’40s.