Vintage Movie Resources
Clara Bow — She’s a Riot! (1926) 🇺🇸
Holbrook Blinn — An Actor of Leisure (1926) 🇺🇸
In these days of bustling and stressful studio life, Holbrook Blinn’s calm approach to his work explains his inimitable poise on the screen.
Renée Adorée — A Couple of Vive Las! (1926) 🇺🇸
Josie Sedgwick — All Together Again! (1926) 🇺🇸
How Alice Terry Lost Her Smile (1926) 🇺🇸
Harrison Ford — Guilty of Comedy (1926) 🇺🇸
The Real Ruth Roland (1926) 🇺🇸
Sid Saylor to Play in Stern Comedies (1926) 🇺🇸
"Metropolis" Likely to be Sensation (1926) 🇺🇸
Erich Von Stroheim Plays Aladdin… (1926) 🇺🇸
… and picks the comparatively unknown Fay Wray for the leading feminine role in his new film, The Wedding March, thereby bringing a miracle into her hitherto unexciting life.
Victor Varconi — A Man Who Kept His Head (1926) 🇺🇸
Malcolm St. Clair — Sex, With a Sense of Humor! (1926) 🇺🇸
What is Vitaphone? (1926) 🇺🇸
A calm analysis of the screen world's latest mechanical discovery.
Myrna Loy — Myrna, Are You Real? (1926) 🇺🇸
Buck Jones — The Simple Life for Buck! (1926) 🇺🇸
Provided you think that cow-punching, bronco-busting, and taming belligerent Mexicans is simple! Not to mention dare-devil movie stunts. But it all seems simple to Buck Jones, and that's the life he loves.
Walter Pidgeon — Presenting Mr. Pidgeon (1926) 🇺🇸
Jack Mulhall — Discovered (1926) 🇺🇸
Clive Brook — Clive Without an Angle (1926) 🇺🇸
Ford Sterling — A Contradictory Comedian (1926) 🇺🇸
Lads and Lassies of Laughter (1926) — Part II 🇺🇸
Part II: The second contingent of young people who appear in short film comedies, and about whom you have read little, are here brought to your attention. | Go back to Part I
Lads and Lassies of Laughter (1926) — Part I 🇺🇸
Part I: A full score of talented and optically pleasing young people smile and prance before your eyes on the screen, but you rarely read anything about them. Often you do not even know their names. Yet they are the players who make you laugh loudest, and you see them more often than your heroes and heroines of the drama, Meet your friends of the short comedies! | Move on to Part II
Arlette Marchal — Mademoiselle — Not Grisette (1926) 🇺🇸
In Arlette Marchal, brought from France by Paramount, is found the carefully reared flower of that great institution, the French home, rather than the little devil of the boulevards.