Vintage Movie Resources
Sizing Up George "Serial" Seitz (1919) 🇺🇸
Director-Producer-Star of the First George B. Seitz Productions, Inc., Serial, "Bound and Gagged," Is a record breaker at concentrated and efficient action.
Margaret Sullavan — Peg runs away! (1934) 🇺🇸
The lowdown on Margaret Sullavan's strange disappearance.
Chester Morris Defies Fame's Jinx (1934) 🇺🇸
Age and other bugaboos of the stars will never terrify Chester Morris if his unique plan works out!
Marlene Dietrich — Marlene Answers All Your Questions (1935) 🇺🇸
Von Sternberg? Husband? Child? Career? Future?
Victor Jory — I'll Be Suing You! (1934) 🇺🇸
Victor Jory is introduced to that quaint Hollywood custom, suing stars.
Going to the Movies in Tahiti (1934) 🇺🇸
For real fun come with us on this visit to the movies in the romantic South Seas where all the entertainment for the movie-goer is not on the screen.
William Selig — Col. Seligs Stories of Movie Life (1923) 🇺🇸
Reminiscence, Grave and Gay, of Twenty-Five Years on a Studio Lot.
Myrtle Stedman — Myrtle of the Mountains (1920) 🇺🇸
Of course, she had to get Chicago out of her system or the city would have been calling her all the time.
Henry Wilcoxon — Lovers for a Day (1935) 🇺🇸
Henry Wilcoxon's greatest emotional experience.
Tullio Carminati — The Woman in His Life (1935) 🇺🇸
Though convention keeps them apart, Carminati's love will go on forever.
Beatrice Burnham — The Rise of Beatrice (1920) 🇺🇸
A soft, cool hand in mine... black eyes that flashed behind a veil... a sigh... It was done so deftly!
Life Can't Bluff Heather Angel! (1934) 🇺🇸
The fascinating story of Heather Angel who is soaring to fame in a career more exciting than a movie!
Alice Faye — Hollywood Can't Change Me! (1935) 🇺🇸
Alice Faye is an honest rough diamond in a town of polished glass.
Muriel Kirkland — Without Beauty (1934) 🇺🇸
Muriel Kirkland was not blessed with beauty and she had an inferiority complex, but that did not stop her from climbing the golden stairs to screen fame.
Al Jennings — The Man Who Came Back (1918) 🇺🇸
His name is Al Jennings, and the famous story of his struggles against society, as a train and bank robber, is now to be told on the screen.
Lady Tsen Mei — A Chinese Doll (1919) 🇺🇸
A largely fictionalized account of the early years and career of actress and vaudeville artist Lady Tsen Mei.
Robert Vaughn — Thanhouser Leading Man (1917) 🇺🇸
Robert Vaughn (Silent Movie Actor), Thanhouser leading man, has a number of invaluable picture assets
Boris Karloff — Please Scare Us, Mr. Karloff! (1934) 🇺🇸
But Boris Karloff, screen monster, is not at all like Boris Karloff, private citizen!
Douglass Montgomery — I’m Sure He’s Nuts… and I Envy Him (1934) 🇺🇸
Douglass Montgomery may prove that all actors are crazy… but you'll agree it's a most appealing "divine insanity of genius".
Kitty Carlisle — Very Different, Off Screen (1935) 🇺🇸
She looks so poised, so continental. Yet she runs, in terror, from autograph hounds.
Kay Francis — The 8 Most Fascinating People in Hollywood (1935) 🇺🇸
Here's a game! Who are your eight Hollywood entries? Let's hear.
Lyle Talbot — Let Me Be a Man for a Change (1935) 🇺🇸
Lyle Talbot begs you to forget his Lothario publicity. He's a man's man.
