Vintage Movie Resources
Future Favorites — Bill Brady (1937) 🇺🇸
Future Favorites — Armida (1937) 🇺🇸
Future Favorites — James Ellison (1937) 🇺🇸
Future Favorites — John King (1937) 🇺🇸
Future Favorites — Patric Knowles (1937) 🇺🇸
Future Favorites — Barbara Roberts (1937) 🇺🇸
Resuming a career that was interrupted four years ago when she fell in love, blonde Barbara Roberts today is on her way to celluloid fame.
Future Favorites — Melville Cooper (1937) 🇺🇸
Future Favorites — William Lundigan (1937) 🇺🇸
Future Favorites — Rose Stradner (1938) 🇺🇸
Future Favorites — Rita Johnson (1937) 🇺🇸
Future Favorites — Maurice Black (1938) 🇺🇸
Bob Hope — Where There’s Life There’s Hope (1935) 🇺🇸
Clarence Muse — Singer of His People (1932) 🇺🇸
Clarence Muse, famed singer and actor, from the 1920s onwards.
In the 1930's, African Americans were not widely featured in the mainstream press, and we believe that this piece provides interesting insights.
Note: This text was published in 1932 and some readers might find some of the writing offensive.
Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy — The Seriousness of Being Funny in Four Languages (1930) 🇺🇸
Girls from the “Follies” Who’ve Made Good on the Screen (1932) 🇺🇸
Did you know that nearly a hundred of the Ziegfeld Follies' girls have made good on the screen?
Adventures in Interviewing (1930) 🇺🇸
Further stories about Hollywood and its Famous Folk — Mack Sennett, Monte Blue, von Sternberg and others.
Bit Players — You Know Their Faces But Not Their Names (1934) 🇬🇧
An overdue tribute to the unsung players who are the real backbone of the screen.
Cinematographic Annual — Elmer Dyer (1930+1931) 🇺🇸
Vintage Advertisement — Aerial Cinematographer Elmer Dyer
Nigel Bruce — The Actor’s Promised Land (1936) 🇬🇧
It’s fashionable to be superior about Hollywood, but here’s one screen player who likes the life in the film city and doesn’t care who knows it.
The Unfamous of Hollywood — George E. Stone — Out of Horror into Happiness (1934) 🇺🇸
The Unfamous of Hollywood — Gilmor Brown — The Star-Maker of Hollywood (1934) 🇺🇸
The Unfamous of Hollywood — Elmer Dyer — Lens On Wings (1934) 🇺🇸
Elmer Dyer is a cameraman. He shot “Hell’s Angels” and “Dawn Patrol,” from the air.