|
Clancy of the Mounted (1933)
Character: Steve Clancy (Tom Clancy's brother)
A Canadian Mountie is assigned to bring in his brother, who was framed for the murder of a gold mine owner. Based on Robert W. Service's poem "Clancy of the Mounted Police."
|
|
|
Danger Ahead (1926)
Character: Hairbreadth Harry
Greedy, Unscrupulous Rudolph learns that Belinda has just inherited $10,000, and he decides to steal it from her. He and his henchmen arrive at her house just as the money is being delivered. Meanwhile, Hairbreadth Harry observes the whole scene, and he hides the money for Belinda. But while Rudolph keeps Harry and Belinda occupied, his henchmen are already going about the job of stealing the money.
|
|
|
Fearless Harry (1926)
Character: Hairbreadth Harry
Beautiful Belinda is kidnapped by Relentless Rudolph; Hairbreadth Harry must race to her rescue.
|
|
|
Sign Them Papers (1927)
Character: Hairbreadth Harry
Beautiful Belinda is kidnapped by terrible people who want her to sign over a gold mine.
|
|
|
Rudolph's Revenge (1928)
Character: Hairbreadth Harry
Relentless Rudolph is back with another scheme to capture Belinda and humiliate Hairbreadth Harrry.
|
|
|
|
|
Playing the Swell (1926)
Character: N/A
Forsaken and broke, Wanda figures out a way to get money. She puts sunglasses on a sleeping homeless person in the park, cuts a hole in the bottom of the derby she's holding, then hides under the bench and picks up the coins dropped by passersby who take pity on the "blind man." She is approached by a handsome young man whom she tries to impress.
|
|
|
Cheating Blondes (1933)
Character: Gilbert Frayle
A reporter sets out to prove that his girlfriend was framed and sent to prison.
|
|
|
Red Lips (1928)
Character: An Upper Classmate
Clean-cut Hugh Carver, a promising freshman, arrives at Sanford College with lofty ideals. His focus on academics and sports is quickly derailed when he falls for popular flapper Cynthia Day and her modern, carefree attitude plus—as the title suggests—her bold red lips. As Hugh is drawn into a world of jazz, late-night parties, and "petting" sessions, his grades suffer. As he struggles to balance the temptations of the era’s rebellious youth culture with his personal integrity and athletic ambitions Hugh must decide if his romance with Cynthia is worth the potential ruin of his future.
|
|
|
The Love Trap (1929)
Character: Party Boy
A chorus girl loses her job and thus the room she owes back rent on, and ends up being rescued from the street by a dashing rich man. But his family isn't over-accepting of chorus girls joining their family.
|
|
|
Traveling Husbands (1931)
Character: Hotel Dining Room Guest
A salesman gets in trouble with a party girl and a debutante in Detroit.
|
|
|
Millie (1931)
Character: College Student (uncredited)
After a tumultuous first marriage, Millie Blake learns to love her newfound independence and drags her feet on the possibility of remarriage. The years pass, and now Millie's daughter garners the attentions of men - men who once devoted their time to her mother.
|
|
|
|
|
Sucker Money (1933)
Character: Jimmy Reeves
A phony spiritualist hypnotizes the daughter of a wealthy banker in a scheme to swindle the banker out of his money. A reporter investigating the swami discovers the plot, determines to expose it.
|
|
|
Our Modern Maidens (1929)
Character: Party Guest (uncredited)
Young, vivacious Billie uses her charms on influential businessman Glenn Abbott in hopes of getting her secret fiancé Gil a diplomatic appointment. Meanwhile, Gil's affections meander to beautiful ingenue Kentucky, Billie's best friend.
|
|
|
The Magic Garden (1927)
Character: Peter Minton, as an adult
Story about a little boy and girl that meet in a beautiful garden and the little girl promises the boy that some day she would meet him there again. He goes off to study the violin in Italy and when he returns he finds the girl in the garden.
|
|
|
Madam Satan (1930)
Character: Zeppelin Reveler
A socialite masquerades as a notorious femme fatale to win back her straying husband during a costume party aboard a doomed dirigible.
|
|
|
Why Be Good? (1929)
Character: Party Guest (uncredited)
A flapper unwittingly falls for the boss' son.
|
|