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** ''[[Tell Me Tonight]]'' (dir. [[Anatole Litvak]], 1932)<!--English-language version of "The Song of Night"-->
** ''[[Tell Me Tonight]]'' (dir. [[Anatole Litvak]], 1932)<!--English-language version of "The Song of Night"-->
** ''{{Ill|La Chanson d'une nuit|fr}}'' (dir. [[Anatole Litvak]], 1933)<!--French-language version of "The Song of Night"-->
** ''{{Ill|La Chanson d'une nuit|fr}}'' (dir. [[Anatole Litvak]], 1933)<!--French-language version of "The Song of Night"-->
* ''[[Sehnsucht 202]]'' (dir. [[Max Neufeld]], 1932)
** ''{{Ill|Une jeune fille et un million|fr}}'' (dir. [[Max Neufeld]] and Fred Ellis, 1932)<!--French-language version of "Sehnsucht 202"-->
* ''[[All for Love (1933 film)|All for Love]]'' (1933)
* ''[[All for Love (1933 film)|All for Love]]'' (1933)
* ''[[A Song for You (film)|A Song for You]]'' (1933)
* ''[[A Song for You (film)|A Song for You]]'' (1933)

Revision as of 14:03, 10 January 2020

Irma von Cube (December 26, 1899 – July 25, 1977) was a German-American screenwriter. She began as an actress and a writer for films in Germany in the early 1930s, and continued when she arrived in the United States in 1938.

Among her films is the They Shall Have Music (1939), Johnny Belinda (1948), for which she received an Academy Award nomination, and Song of Love (1947) co-starring Katharine Hepburn, Paul Henreid, and Robert Walker. She also directed one of five segments of the Italy-UK co-production anthology film A Tale of Five Cities (1951).

Selected filmography