Vintage Movie Resources
Isabel Jewell — Love Comes to Isabel Jewell (1936) 🇺🇸
The breaks finally came to Isabel Jewell — spelling real love and recognition
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) 🇺🇸
Tyrone Power — This Is What I Believe (1946) 🇺🇸
"I think that love and marriage are here to stay, atomic bomb or not!"
Eddie Bracken’s 5-Year Plan (1946) 🇺🇸
Harry Lewis — New Man for Fans (1946) 🇺🇸
Yvonne DeCarlo — The Beautiful and Blessed (1946) 🇺🇸
Dan Duryea — Look Who's a Hero! (1955)
As TV’s China Smith, Dan Duryea enjoys his vacation from villainy.
Dan Duryea — Dan, the Deadly (1945) 🇺🇸
Don DeFore — Stooging for Stardom (1945) 🇺🇸
None But The Lonely Heart (1944)
Cary Grant | Ethel Barrymore | Barry Fitzgerald | June Duprez | Jane Wyatt | George Coulouris | Dan Duryea | Roman Bohnen | Konstantin Shayne | Marie de Becker | Clifford Odets
Michael Chekhov — The Man of 1,000 Personalities (1946) 🇺🇸
Geraldine Fitzgerald — Just Who Is Geraldine? (1946) 🇺🇸
Henry Koster Practices Exactly What He Preaches (1950) 🇺🇸
Anna Lee — The Beautiful British (1943) 🇺🇸
Philip Dorn — The Indomitable Dutch (1943) 🇺🇸
Al Christie — Everybody Calls Him Al (1927) 🇺🇸
Bobby Vernon — On and Off (1927) 🇺🇸
It was a small picture house in Glendale. In the crowded lobby hung a huge lithograph announcing the evening’s comedy. Beside it stood the manager of the theatre in deep conversation with a boyish looking, blue-eyed chap. A ragged newsboy rounded the corner and emitted a shrill Whoopee! at sight of the lithograph. For a minute or two he studied it in ecstasy, then he tugged at the young fellows coat. “Hey, mister, who are you?” he demanded, curiously.
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
