23 photos

Witness for the Prosecution Still of Tyrone Power and Charles Laughton in Witness for the Prosecution Still of Charles Laughton and Elsa Lanchester in Witness for the Prosecution Still of Charles Laughton in Witness for the Prosecution Still of Marlene Dietrich in Witness for the Prosecution Still of Tyrone Power in Witness for the Prosecution Still of Charles Laughton and Elsa Lanchester in Witness for the Prosecution Still of Marlene Dietrich and Tyrone Power in Witness for the Prosecution Still of Marlene Dietrich in Witness for the Prosecution Still of Tyrone Power and Charles Laughton in Witness for the Prosecution Marlene Dietrich Witness For The Prosecution 1957 United Artists / MPTV Witness For The Prosecution Marlene Dietrich 1957 United Artists / MPTV Witness for the Prosecution Witness for the Prosecution Witness for the Prosecution Witness for the Prosecution Witness for the Prosecution Witness for the Prosecution Witness for the Prosecution Witness for the Prosecution Witness for the Prosecution Witness for the Prosecution Witness for the Prosecution

23 photos

View the latest pictures, photos and images from Witness for the Prosecution - It's Britain, 1953. Upon his return to work following a heart attack, irrepressible barrister Sir Wilfrid Robarts, known as a barrister for the hopeless, takes on a murder case, much to the exasperation of his medical team, led by his overly regulated private nurse, Miss Plimsoll, who tries her hardest to ensure that he not return to his hard living ways - including excessive cigar smoking and drinking - while he takes his medication and gets his much needed rest. That case is defending American war veteran Leonard Vole, a poor, out of work, struggling inventor who is accused of murdering his fifty-six year old lonely and wealthy widowed acquaintance, Emily French. The initial evidence is circumstantial but points to Leonard as the murderer. Despite being happily married to East German former beer hall performer Christine Vole, he fostered that friendship with Mrs. French in the hopes that she would finance one of his many inventions to the tune of a few hundred pounds...