Vintage Movie Resources
Nils Asther in “The Bitter Tea of General Yen” (1932) 🇺🇸
Nils Asther was laid low by a Swedish accent when talkies came in
The Art of Photoengraving (1943) 🇺🇸
Paul Muni — Great Actor — Great Hermit (1936) 🇺🇸
This is Katharine Hepburn (1936) 🇺🇸
Charles Boyer — Master of Charm (1936) 🇺🇸
Women succumb to his charm, his powerful personality without being able to help themselves.
Will Garbo Marry Her Director, Rouben Mamoulian? (1934) 🇺🇸
What’s a Stooge? Ted Healy Tells You! (1934) 🇺🇸
Ted Healy had just finished a scene with Robert Montgomery in a picture when I cornered him. I had been hanging around some time, waiting to get the answer to “What is a stooge?”
Vintage ad with Spencer Tracy and Constance Cummings towards the end of this article.
Boris Karloff — Through Horror Came Happiness (1936) 🇺🇸
Lionel Stander — Meet The Stander-Outer (1936) 🇺🇸
On the Set with John Huston, Directing “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre” (1947) 🇺🇸
John Huston walked slowly out of the Acapulca bar and pulled a cigarette tobacco pouch from the breast pocket of his wrinkled tweed jacket. Tall and lanky, dressed in unpressed slacks and a crushed felt hat, he looked like a youthful, gangling cowboy. His somewhat battered ex-fighter’s face wore a quietly serious expression.
Rouben Mamoulian — What Do You Think of Color? (1935) 🇺🇸
Leo McCarey — He Directs for Laughs — and Gets ‘Em (1935) 🇺🇸
Four Directors Tell What’s Wrong with the Movies (1933) 🇺🇸
Melvyn Douglas — Famous Overnight (1932) 🇺🇸
Irving Pichel — Rebel! (1932) 🇺🇸
They’re Capra-Crazy (1941) 🇺🇸
James Stewart — The Inside Story (1936) 🇬🇧
James Stewart is one of Hollywood’s big new bets. In the comparatively short time he has been on the screen, he has rattled off some first-rate performances which have sent him shooting up the popularity poll at a tremendous rate.
Bela Lugosi, Lionel Atwill and Boris Karloff — Three Live Ghosts (1935) 🇺🇸
Ernst Lubitsch — First Wit of the Films! (1935) 🇺🇸
Ernst Lubitsch is more colorful than the stars he directs! Vintage ads by Genevieve Tobin and Cary Grant (“Cheramy — It's the perfume I never can forget.”)
