|
Ireland's Border Line (1938)
Character: Sadie Tyler
Billy Brannigan, a mechanic, has some difficulties and problems when he gets mixed up with the police looking for a jewel thief. An identical suitcase used by Billy and the thief cause most of the troubles.
|
|
|
The White Sheik (1928)
Character: Zarita
In the Sahara a British Riff chief weds a captured girl to save her from the tribe.
|
|
|
The Vortex (1928)
Character: Anna Vollof
A young man is shocked to discover that his fiancé is the mistress of his mother's lover.
|
|
|
|
|
Night Alone (1938)
Character: Gloria
Charles and Barbara are a devoted couple who, in seven years' marriage, have never spent a night apart. When they come up to town for a family engagement, an urgent business appointment obliges Charles to let Barbara go on without him. Left alone and bored in the hotel, Charles agrees to accompany a man-about-town friend to a nightclub. He gets helplessly drunk among dubious company, and come the morning finds that a hangover is the least of his problems..!
|
|
|
Commissionaire (1933)
Character: Thelma Monsell
A Commissionaire is suspected of a robbery committed by his son.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
One of the Best (1927)
Character: Claire Melville
'1820. Officer frames colleague when gambler forces him to steal secrets.' (British Film Catalogue)
|
|
|
|
|
Love's Old Sweet Song (1933)
Character: Iris Sinclair
'Farmer loves singer whom his half-brother marries and abandons with baby.' (British Film Catalogue)
|
|
|
Victory (1928)
Character: Marie Dulac
'France, 1918. Armistice saves girl and pilot from death, but not Canadian agent.' (British Film Catalogue)
|
|
|
|
|
Afterwards (1928)
Character: Tocati
A doctor shoots a girl to save her from Indians and later finds her fiancé is his rival for another girl.
|
|
|
|
|
The Triumph of the Rat (1926)
Character: Mou-Mou
Pierre Boucheron, alias 'The Rat' and a former underworld notoriety, is now living the high life as the kept man of Zelie de Chaumet. But when she learns he is planning to marry another woman, her vengeance pursues him into the murkiest depths of Paris...
|
|
|
A Dream of Love (1939)
Character: (uncredited)
Aging composer Franz Liszt lives in an abbey. On his birthday, a priest brings him a box that was just delivered; there is no return address. In the box he finds a single flower. The flower brings back memories of his lost love of long ago, who inspired him to compose his unforgettable melodies.
|
|
|
The Man with the Limp (1923)
Character: Zarmi
This action-packed episode features one of the Devil Doctor's most enjoyably silly schemes to do away with his nemesis Nayland Smith. When Smith goes missing, it's up to Dr Petrie to continue the hunt for the Si-Fan, Fu-Manchu's secret society. On the trail of a mysterious man with a limp, Petrie disguises himself as a rough bargee to investigate a smoky riverside drinking den, the Joy-Shop Club.
|
|
|
The Queen of Hearts (1923)
Character: Zarmi
Based on Sax Rohmer’s third Fu-Manchu novel, The Si-Fan Mysteries (1917), this sensational episode sees Fu-Manchu partly paralysed by a bullet wound. The Devil Doctor snatches eminent surgeon Sir Baldwin Frazer to carry out the delicate operation he needs. Dr Petrie, abducted by Fu-Manchu’s scheming assistant, Zarmi, must assist – and choose a playing card to determine whether he lives or dies...
|
|
|
Saloon Bar (1940)
Character: Eleanor (maid)
A bookmaker with a fancy for detective work attempts to prevent the execution of a potentially innocent man.
|
|
|
The Rat (1925)
Character: Mou Mou
When bored courtesan Zelie de Chaumet begs her lover, the corrupt and powerful Stetz, to take her slumming, the pair encounter Pierre Boucheron, alias 'The Rat' , boy-king of the Paris underworld, and the innocent Odile. Love, life and jewels are risked and lost in this powerful romantic melodrama as the four characters' lives are changed by this chance encounter for ever.
|
|
|
The Dark Eyes of London (1939)
Character: Orloff's Secretary
Insurance agent-physician collects on policies of men murdered by a disfigured resident of the home for the blind where he acts as doctor-on-call.
|
|
|
Queen of Hearts (1936)
Character: Rita Dow
A woman prevents a popular stage performer getting arrested for drunk driving, though has to pretend to be a rich benefactor when she next meets him.
|
|
|
Fiddlers Three (1944)
Character: Señorita Àlvarez (uncredited)
Two British soldiers and a WREN take refuge at Stonehenge during a thunderstorm, they are struck by lightning and transported back to ancient Rome.
|
|
|
Nell Gwyn (1934)
Character: Hortense
King Charles II first meets Nell Gwyn after seeing her do a turn at Drury Lane. They soon become close, the King preferring her feisty irreverent company to that of the aristocratic French Duchess of Portsmouth. Nell becomes his most loyal subject, while ever-ready to take the Duchess down a peg. But the actress can never hope to be fully accepted by the King's circle despite his constant attentions.
|
|
|
Our Fighting Navy (1937)
Character: Juanita (the assassin)
Trouble is brewing in the banana republic of Bianco for both His Excellency, El Presidente, and the British Consul, Brant. Rebels, led by Diego De Costa, the trusted "Minister of the Marines and the Customs" and Lieutenant Enricquo, the gunnery officer of the small republic's one battleship, have taken over the battleship, and the town. Most of the British citizens have taken refuge at the Consulate or have been evacuated to the small cruiser in Bianco's port, the "H. M. S. Audacious." But there are two major issues; the Consul's daughter, Pamela, and Canadian Lieutenant Bill Armstrong have been kidnapped by the rebels and now held hostage on the battleship "El Mirante," and El Presidente was visiting the consulate when the war broke out and is now under the protective custody of the British Empire.
|
|
|
The Fake (1927)
Character: Cabaret Dancer
'MP forces daughter to marry titled drug addict who dies when her lover tries to cure him.' (British Film Catalogue)
|
|
|
Kiss the Bride Goodbye (1945)
Character: Part-time Worker
Working-class girl Joan Dodd's plan to marry Jack Fowler is thwarted when her mother Gladys interferes. Hoping to improve her daughter's social status, Gladys arranges for Joan to wed her boss Adolphus Pickering while Jack is away at war. Jack arrives home to discover his love is engaged to another man. Who will Joan decide to marry?
|
|
|
|