Classic Comedies Collection: Bringing Up Baby / The Philadelphia Story / Dinner At Eight / Libeled Lady / Stage Door / To Be Or Not To Be (Full Frame)

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Classic Comedies Collection: Bringing Up Baby / The Philadelphia Story / Dinner At Eight / Libeled Lady / Stage Door / To Be Or Not To Be (Full Frame)

This Collection includes "Bringing Up Baby", "The Philadelphia Story", "Dinner At Eight", "Libeled Lady", "Stage Door" and "To Be Or Not To Be". "Bringing Up Baby": All the earnest paleontologist (Cary Grant) wants is an intercoastal clavicle to complete his brontosaurus skeleton. What he gets is an out-of-control toboggan ride with a scatterbrained heiress (Katharine Hepburn) nuts about him (or maybe just nuts). Riding along are a dog named George, a leopard named Baby, a snooty society matron with a spare million, a caretaker on the sauce and more. "The Philadelphia Story": Sophisticated romantic comedy achieved its pinnacle in this timeless classic voted one of the Top 100 American Films of all time by the American Film Institute. Katharine Hepburn, Cary Grant, and Best Actor Academy Award(R) winner James Stewart star in the masterful comedy (directed by George Cukor) about a faultfinding, bride-to-be socialite who gets her comeuppance. "Dinner At Eight": Dinner At Eight, a vastly entertaining behind-closed-doors glimpse into the lives of the troubled and troublemaking Who's Who of people invited to a posh Manhattan party, is served with ample helpings of humor and melodrama. "Libeled Lady": Four of Hollywood's greatest stars - William Powell, Jean Harlow, Myrna Loy and Spencer Tracy-reel in this whopper of a screwball romantic comedy classic nominated for a Best Picture Oscar(R). It all starts when society diva Loy slaps newsman Tracy with a libel suit. Tracy enlists fiancee Harlow and down-on-his-luck Powell in a counter maneuver involving a rigged marriage, a phony seduction, a fabulously funny fishing scene, fisticuffs, broken promises, and hearts and eventually, true love for all. "Stage Door": Ginger Rogers and Ann Miller tap in time and rat-a-tat lines. Lucille Ball braves a date with an obnoxious lumber baron. Eve Arden can't recall Hamlet but one meets so many people in the big city.