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Wild People (1932)
Character: Panther Lady
The Globe Broadcasting Company does a radio broadcast from Dutch New Guinea, with the aborigines as performers.
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I Believed in You (1934)
Character: Vavara (as Joyzelle)
An aspiring writer and her boyfriend, a professional agitator head off to the Big Apple in search of good fortune. Unfortunately, the agitator soon finds himself in trouble with the cops. Meanwhile the writer attempts to become a Greenwich Village Bohemian type. She and her new friends are all starving for their art until a kindly gent offers them financial assistant. They refuse on principle. Tragedy pays a call when the writer learns that her boyfriend has been untrue.
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The Shady Lady (1928)
Character: N/A
The Shady Lady is a 1928 sound part-talkie American drama film directed by Edward H. Griffith.
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Song of the Caballero (1930)
Character: Conchita
After El Lobo robs Don Jose he gives one of the stolen items to Conchita. Later when he saves Anita in a runaway coach, Don Pedro invites him to the wedding of Anita and his son Don Jose. But Conchita is at the wedding and recognizes him putting his life in danger.
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Souvenirs (1928)
Character: The Captain's French Love
Loves of a ship's captain on the high seas!
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Glorious Vamps (1930)
Character: Salome (uncredited)
A burlesque survey of femmes fatales through the ages.
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Dance Madness (1926)
Character: Dancer
May s married to Roger, an alcoholic hell-raiser. During one of their riotous parties, she tests his fidelity by impersonating a notorious masked dancer and trying to seduce him.
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The Night Court (1927)
Character: Irene Tabasco, Exotic Dancer
A police raid on a night club results in the entire cast of the club's floor show being hauled into court, where they must perform their routines for the judge.
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Old Loves and New (1926)
Character: N/A
Gervas Carew's wife, Elinor, has deserted him while he was fighting for France, for Lord Clyde Geraldine, a cad of the first order, but Elinor, in turn is cast off when Lord Geraldine turns his attention to an Irish lass, Marny. Marny has no idea of Geraldine's past nor his brutal nature.
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The Sign of the Cross (1932)
Character: Ancaria
A Roman soldier becomes torn between his love for a Christian woman and his loyalty to Emperor Nero.
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One Hysterical Night (1929)
Character: Salome
The scheming aunt and uncle of William Judd, heir to the family fortune, persuade him to pose as Napoleon at a fancy masquerade ball, but they are actually having him committed to an insane asylum. Since all the other inmates/attendees think they are historical figures such as Robin Hood, the Duke of Wellington, Paul Revere, William Tell, Salome, Robinson Crusoe, Sherlock Holmes and others, it takes a while for Judd to separate the wheat from the chaff and prove he is not deranged. His quest becomes more urgent when he falls in love with a nurse named Josephine, who does not think she is Napoleon's "Josephine" but is convinced Judd thinks he is Napoleaon.
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The Vanishing Frontier (1933)
Character: Dolores
Its 1850 and California is under ruthless military rule. Kirby Tornell's rancho has been taken over by soldiers and when two of Kirby's men are captured, he goes there to free them. He meets the General's daughter there and attracted to her, repeatedly returns to see her. Eventually he is captured and now his men must try and rescue him.
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Whistlin' Dan (1932)
Character: Carmelita
A cowboy and sidekick infiltrate a rustler gang to avenge the murder of their pal.
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Just Imagine (1930)
Character: Loo Loo / Boo Boo
New York, 1980: airplanes have replaced cars, numbers have replaced names, pills have replaced food, government-arranged marriages have replaced love, and test tube babies have replaced ... well, you get the idea. Scientists revive a man struck by lightning in 1930; he is rechristened "Single O". He is befriended by J-21, who can't marry the girl of his dreams because he isn't "distinguished" enough -- until he is chosen for a 4-month expedition to Mars by a renegade scientist. The Mars J-21, his friend, and stowaway Single O visit is full of scantily clad women doing Busby Berkeley-style dance numbers and worshiping a fat middle-aged man.
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House of Mystery (1934)
Character: Chanda
Out of the Mystic Temples of Old India crept this terrible Monster to wreak vengeance of the Hindu Gods. One by one its victims fell with not a trace of the bloody assassin.
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Turn Back the Hours (1928)
Character: A Cantina Girl
Turn Back the Hours is a 1928 American silent drama film directed by Howard Bretherton and starring Myrna Loy, Walter Pidgeon, and Sam Hardy.
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Moran of the Marines (1928)
Character: N/A
After getting into a fight with a drunkard, Mike Moran spends 10 days on the rock pile and is disinherited by his wealthy uncle; out of luck and work, Mike joins the Marines and is soon court-martialed for kissing Vivian Marshall, a general's daughter. Mike's unit is ordered to China, and Mike goes along under guard. Vivian accompanies her father and is captured by a Chinese bandit; Mike rescues her and is himself taken prisoner. Vivian leads a Marine detachment to his rescue, and Mike is quickly pardoned, reinstated by his uncle, and firmly established in Vivian's affections. A lost film.
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Go Into Your Dance (1935)
Character: Cantina Dancer
An irresponsible Broadway star gets mixed up with gambling and gangsters.
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Prince of Diamonds (1930)
Character: Dancing Girl (as Joyzelle)
Eve Marley (Aileen Pringle)is forced to marry a wealthy jeweler that she does not love in order to save the man she loves, Rupert Endon (Ian Keith), from being unjustly arrested as a thief. Rupert, unaware of the reason his sweetheart married his rival, goes to the Far East where he grows rich after discovering a diamond mine. He breaks Eve's husband by underselling him and then returns to England to exact his revenge on the woman he thinks did him wrong.
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