Vintage Movie Resources
Marilyn Miller — Her Strange Handicap (1930) 🇺🇸
Yola d’Avril — In The Springtime (1930) 🇺🇸
A young man's fancy can easily turn to Yola d’Avril, in April or in August, and besides, her budding career is well worth considering.
Estelle Taylor — The Delaware Delilah (1930) 🇺🇸
Why Don't They Star? (1929) 🇺🇸
Jean Arthur — Nasal — But Nice (1930) 🇺🇸
Charles Bickford — The Big Goat-Getter from Boston (1930) 🇺🇸
John Stambaugh — From the Dust of Defeat (1930) 🇺🇸
Ann Harding — Blond — But Not Light (1930) 🇺🇸
John Cassavetes — "Who Needs Good Looks?" (1957) 🇺🇸
Certainly not the human dynamo named Cassavetes, who "only" has genuine talent, enthusiasm and drive to burn
Will Tony Randall Spoil Success? (1958) 🇺🇸
Tony's unique personality is a curious combination of naive nonsense and urbane wit
Ina Claire — Not Just a Wife (1930) 🇺🇸
"I look incongruous in aprons!" says Ina Claire Gilbert — one reason she will never retire from a star dressing-room to live in a 12-room cottage
Otis Skinner — Lost in the Hollywood Maze (1930) 🇺🇸
Madge Evans — Pauvre Enfant ? Merci — Non ! (1918) 🇺🇸
Lila Lee — Do You Believe in Fairies? (1918) 🇺🇸
Roy Stewart — A Blue-Ribbon Baby (1918) 🇺🇸
May Allison is Back! (1918) 🇺🇸
Marguerite Snow — She Never Worked for Griffith (1918) 🇺🇸
David Warfield — He Refused Five Thousand a Day (1918) 🇺🇸
Anita Stewart — Anita's War Garden (1918) 🇺🇸
Tsuru Aoki — An American From Tokio (1918) 🇺🇸
Charles T. Dazey — A Dramatist Who Came Back (1918) 🇺🇸
Hedda Nova — A Refugee from Russia (1918) 🇺🇸
Agnes Christine Johnston — Good-Bye, Hollywood! (1930) 🇺🇸
Why one of Hollywood's most successful writers and most popular girls left motion pictures, told by herself
Barbara Stanwyck — Not a Pattern Girl (1931) 🇺🇸
Barbara Stanwyck was fired from her first job selling patterns, so she's never been a pattern girl since!