Vintage Movie Resources
Lads and Lassies of Laughter (1926) — Part I 🇺🇸
Part I: A full score of talented and optically pleasing young people smile and prance before your eyes on the screen, but you rarely read anything about them. Often you do not even know their names. Yet they are the players who make you laugh loudest, and you see them more often than your heroes and heroines of the drama, Meet your friends of the short comedies! | Move on to Part II
Lois Moran — As The Twig Is Bent (1930) 🇺🇸
Ingrid Bergman — Scandinavian Charmer (1941) 🇺🇸
Alice Day — The Girl Who Wouldn't Undress (An Impression of Alice Day) (1929) 🇺🇸
Arlette Marchal — Mademoiselle — Not Grisette (1926) 🇺🇸
In Arlette Marchal, brought from France by Paramount, is found the carefully reared flower of that great institution, the French home, rather than the little devil of the boulevards.
What Emil Jannings Fears (1926) 🇺🇸
The great German actor, discussaing art and his coming visit to this country to make pictures for Paramount, betrays a desire with which many will sympathize and which some may try to alleviate.
Richard Dix — He Rolls His Own (1926) 🇺🇸
Richard Dix explains how he and his director, Gregory La Cava, evolve their popular screen comedies, from the moment the scenario — which sometimes is nothing more than a scrap of paper — is placed in their hands.
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.
Wallace Ford — The Boy Without a Name (1932) 🇺🇸
From Wallace Ford — the man who is considered by many as a screen discovery — comes this story, more amazing than any Hollywood scenario.
