Vintage Movie Resources
Joseph Walker — My Toughest Shooting Assignment (1937) 🇺🇸
Director of Photography Joseph Walker, A.S.C., on the set of “Lost Horizon”
June Knight Experiments (1937) 🇬🇧
The lovely blonde dancing star of Capitol's The Lilac Domino is going to forsake glamour for a few months and live a student life in Paris on an allowance of five pounds a week.
Ralph Richardson — He Started at the Bottom (1937) 🇺🇸
"Now one of the best bets in British Studios, Ralph Richardson started his career as an actor — by painting!
Margaret Lockwood — She's a Real Girl (1937) 🇬🇧
Margaret Lockwood has just been awarded a three-year contract by Gainsborough Pictures. Here is a summing-up of her personality and achievements.
Future Favorites — Rosalind Keith (1937) 🇺🇸
When Rosalind Keith, brown eyed brunette, first came to Hollywood she was determined to become an actress.
Future Favorites — Joan Perry (1937) 🇺🇸
Joan Perry has been in Hollywood for a year, during which time she has played leading roles in a dozen pictures.
Mad Anthony Quinn — Actor (1937) 🇺🇸
A versatile young man has become a veritable Caesar of the Cinema. He came — he saw — he conquered. And this story gives you the reasons.
Scene Stealers — The Most Dangerous Men in Hollywood (1937) 🇺🇸
Filmland’s rogue’s gallery contains many famous faces. When these scene stealers get to work, Taylor, Gable and Power haven’t a chance. (Watch out for them)
Walter Brennan — Up From the Bottom (1937) 🇺🇸
You can’t tell Walter Brennan how to become a star.
Melville Cooper — The Wrong Star (1937) 🇬🇧
Melville Cooper wishes that the sight-seeing bus line which passes by his doorway in Brentwood would straighten out the matter of Garbo’s right address.
Future Favorites — Bill Brady (1937) 🇺🇸
It is quite usual for a boy’s voice to dive from choir soprano to basso profundo at a certain tender age... It is almost unheard of for a full-grown man’s voice to change from a lusty baritone to a lyric tenor.
Future Favorites — Armida (1937) 🇺🇸
A membership in that select Hollywood society of actors and actresses who have inherited their talents from their parents belongs to the diminutive Mexican pepper-pot, the vivacious Armida.
Future Favorites — James Ellison (1937) 🇺🇸
James Ellison is one of the few western stars to leave those ranks for leads in top-rating feature productions.
Future Favorites — John King (1937) 🇺🇸
Ben Bernie and Zeppo Marx are responsible for this young man’s start in the theatrical world...
Future Favorites — Patric Knowles (1937) 🇺🇸
Being one of Hollywood’s young actors who is more than a 4-to-1 bet to reach the top rung of movieland’s ladder of fame isn’t enough for Patric Knowles...
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) 🇺🇸
Melville Cooper faced obscurity when a studio gave him only eighteen lines to speak in two years.
Future Favorites — William Lundigan (1937) 🇺🇸
Instead of going to the movies he made them come to him. Instead of hammering at the gates of casting-offices he projected his voice and personality over the radio.
Future Favorites — Rita Johnson (1937) 🇺🇸
Rita Johnson’s high-school dramatic coach told her that she would never become an actress.
Basil Rathbone — Once A Villain (1937) 🇺🇸
Basil has made people hate him so thoroughly they like him tremendously on the screen.
Men Behind the Stars — Mervyn LeRoy (1937) 🇺🇸
The variety of past contributions to the screen marks him with unequalled versatility of genius. He has coupled such hard-hitting drama as “Little Caesar” with the frivolities of a “Gold Diggers” extravaganza.
Men Behind the Stars — Tay Garnett (1937) 🇺🇸
Before Tay Garnett found film fame, Garnett was an actor, an artist, an author and an aviator. Not to mention his stint as a thorough-going newspaperman and a sailor of the bounding main.
Men Behind the Stars — Victor Fleming (1937) 🇺🇸
Victor Fleming became a director the “hard way.”
Men Behind the Stars — John M. Stahl (1937) 🇺🇸
By the time John M. Stahl had reached his sixteenth birthday, he was sure that he did not want to follow in the footsteps of his father.