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  1. Ladislaus Bus-Fekete (1896–1971) was a Hungarian playwright and journalist. A number of his works have been adapted into films including Ladies in Love, The Baroness and the Butler and Heaven Can Wait. [1]

  2. Leslie Bush-Fekete. Writer: Heaven Can Wait. Ladislaus Bus-Fekete first worked as a critic for the Hungarian theater magazine Színházi Élet. His review of the only (lost) opera by the operetta composer Paul Abraham (Etelkas Herz) is interesting from a musical history point of view.

    • Writer
    • January 29, 1896
    • Leslie Bush-Fekete
    • July 25, 1971
  3. Ladies in Love is a 1936 American romantic comedy film based upon the play by Ladislaus Bus-Fekete. It was directed by Edward H. Griffith and stars Janet Gaynor, Constance Bennett and Loretta Young. The film revolves around three roommates (Gaynor, Bennett, and Young) in exotic Budapest and their comical romantic adventures.

  4. Abstract: The Edmond Pauker Papers consist of manuscripts, chiefly by Pauker's client, Ferenc Molnár; business files including correspondence, contracts, financial papers, and reviews and publicity materials for plays and other works by Pauker's clients; and a small amount of personal papers.

  5. English. The Baroness and the Butler is a 1938 American romantic comedy film directed by Walter Lang and starring William Powell and Annabella in her American English-language debut. The supporting cast includes Helen Westley, Joseph Schildkraut, Nigel Bruce and Lynn Bari. The film was produced and distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox.

  6. The film’s storyline, based on the play Three Girls by Ladislaus Bus-Fekete, became a virtual template at the studio, inspiring later iterations of the formula such as How to Marry a Millionaire (1953).

  7. Leslie Bush-Fekete. Writer: Heaven Can Wait. Ladislaus Bus-Fekete first worked as a critic for the Hungarian theater magazine Színházi Élet. His review of the only (lost) opera by the operetta composer Paul Abraham (Etelkas Herz) is interesting from a musical history point of view.