Vintage Movie Resources
Blanche Sweet Tells Her Untold Tale (1928) 🇺🇸
Confessions of the Stars — The first of a series of real life stories.
Constance Talmadge Tells Her Untold Tale (1928) 🇺🇸
Confessions of the Stars — The second of a series of real life stories. Constance Talmadge reveals the untold truth about what she has been what she is, and what she wants to be.
Anna Q. Nilsson Tells Her Untold Tale (1929) 🇺🇸
Confessions of the Stars — The sixth of a series of real life stories.
Bessie Love Tells Her Untold Tale (1929) 🇺🇸
Confessions of the Stars — The ninth of a series of real life stories.
Oscar Contender — John Mills (1971) 🇺🇸
John Mills just went home but not for long we hope. All too rarely does the man — or woman — measure up to his publicity. This one does, and then some.
Helmut Dantine — Important Import (1943) 🇺🇸
Mr. Dantine of Vienna, whose name is news in movies and whose past is a symbol for America.
Lois Wilson Tells Her Untold Tale (1929) 🇺🇸
Confessions of the Stars — The seventh of a series of real life stories.
Corinne Griffith Tells Her Untold Tale (1929) 🇺🇸
Confessions of the Stars — The eighth of a series of real life stories.
Lew Cody — The Code of Cody (1929) 🇺🇸
Lew chose to face starvation rather than be the butterfly man.
Edward Everett Horton — Horton is Horton (1929) 🇺🇸
He's the stage actor who throws film stars completely off their orbits.
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) 🇺🇸
Victor Varconi did not run away to go onto the stage, nor has he at any critical point in his career allowed himself to be carried away by emotion. He has won success by reasoning things out.
Bebe Daniels Tells Her Untold Tale (1929) 🇺🇸
Confessions of the Stars — The fourth of a series of real life stories. The life of Bebe Daniels has been another one of those open books with, every page well thumbed. Every page save one.
Malcolm St. Clair — Sex, With a Sense of Humor! (1926) 🇺🇸
Malcolm St. Clair who tamed stars, studios and exhibitors into letting him do what he and the public likes.
Jane Winton — Hardly The Same Girl! (1930) 🇺🇸
Jane Winton has grown up into a new person since Picture Play's first interview with a slip of a "Follies" girl just learning her way about the studio.
Warner Baxter — As He Is (1930) 🇺🇸
A friendly microscope is focused on the character and career of Mr. Baxter, with some little-known facts revealed for the first time.
Robert Armstrong — He'll Be a Big Star in a Year (1929) 🇺🇸
Yes, Zat's unquestionably true of Robert Armstrong with success before and a love-life behind him.
William Bakewell — The Native Son Also Rises (1929) 🇺🇸
William Bakewell of Hollywood will always remember himself as the young man who knew Coolidge.
Raoul Walsh — He Envies His Actors (1929) 🇺🇸
And upon the least provocation, Raoul Walsh stops directing and joins his actors
Dorothea Wieck — Girl with "Uniform" Appeal! (1933) 🇺🇸
Dorothea graduates from Europe to Hollywood, and she's our Wieck-ness now!
Claudette Colbert — Why Claudette Went Gay! (1933) 🇺🇸
La Colbert chooses between types of screen "naughtiness".
ZaSu Pitts and Slim Summerville — Is it Sad to be Funny? (1933) 🇺🇸
Merrily mournful, gaily grim, the most hilarious comedians seem to wear the longest faces!
Walter Huston — I Won't Live in Hollywood (1936) 🇺🇸
And tells a dozen reasons why, straight from the shoulder.
Walter Abel — Abel Raises Cain (1936) 🇺🇸
"Don't go West, young man! Go East, if you want to be a film actor' most emphatically says Walter Abel, Hollywood's latest rave. He says a mouthful, having gone through the mill.
