Beatrice Blinn

Personal Info

Known For

Acting

Known Credits

0.005

Gender

Female

Birthday

07-Jul-1901

Age

(124 years old)

Place of Birth

Forest County, Wisconsin, USA

Also Known As
  • NO INFO PROVIDED

Beatrice Blinn

Biography

NO BIOGRAPHY AVAILABLE


Credits

The Cheer Leader The Cheer Leader (1930) Character: N/A
A college cheerleader is injured in an auto accident just before the Big Game.
Women in Prison Women in Prison (1938) Character: Prisoner
The superintendent of a women's prison is pressured to pardon a member of a criminal gang. When she refuses, her daughter is framed on a manslaughter charge and sent to prison.
Nothing But Pleasure Nothing But Pleasure (1940) Character: An intoxicated woman
To save money, Buster and his wife decide to drive to Detroit to buy a new car, then drive it home.
Art Trouble Art Trouble (1934) Character: Girl in white hat
Harry Gribbon and Shemp Howard enter the world of fine art in Paris.
A Star Is Shorn A Star Is Shorn (1939) Character: Botswaddle's Secretary
Danny Webb plays wanna-be Hollywood agent, Speedy Williams, while Mary Treen plays Patsy, the best friend of Hazel Hackenschmitt (Ethelreda Leopold). Having just won the hometown title of "Miss Maple Syrup", Hazel decides to move to Hollywood to be a star. Speedy cooks up a scheme to get her seen by important Hollywood producer, B.O. Botswaddle (Raymond Brown) who is known to never make a move without Astrological guidance. This scheme involves making up Patsy with turban and a 3rd Eye, and introducing her to Botswaddle as a mystical seer... one, of course, who see's Hazel as the star of his next motion picture. Naturally, things do not go as planned. Treen is especially memorable in a wonderfully goofy role.
Pick a Peck of Plumbers Pick a Peck of Plumbers (1944) Character: Bridge Party Lady (uncredited)
After backing over a police motorcycle, Axel and Elmer are fined $100 and given 48 hours to come up with the money or go to jail. Knowing nothing about plumbing, they answer Mr. Skunkem's ad for plumber's assistants, and are sent to the Dinwitty estate to recover a diamond ring from a drain pipe. In due course they destroy the bathroom, and switch the gas and water lines, disrupting Mrs. Dinwitty's bridge party, Vanillia's dinner preparation, and the gardener's lawn watering.
Grass Skirts Grass Skirts (1929) Character: N/A
Lloyd Hamilton stars in this Educational short.
Violent Is the Word for Curly Violent Is the Word for Curly (1938) Character: Brainy Astronomy Student (uncredited)
The stooges are left in charge of a gas station and manage to blow up the car of their first customers, three famous European professors. The stooges steal some of the academics' clothes and wind up at "Mildew", a women's college where the three professors are expected. Mistaken as the real thing, the boys take their place on the faculty. When the real professors show up, the stooges try to convince a rich woman, the schools benefactor, that an athletics programs is more important. Their athletics demonstration comes to an explosive end when the real professors slip them a nitroglycerin basketball.
Mr. Deeds Goes to Town Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936) Character: Assistant Secretary (uncredited)
Longfellow Deeds lives in a small town, leading a small town kind of life. When a relative dies and leaves Deeds a fortune, Longfellow moves to the big city where he becomes an instant target for everyone. Deeds outwits them all until Babe Bennett comes along. When small-town boy meets big-city girl anything can, and does, happen.
Cafe Hostess Cafe Hostess (1940) Character: Daisy
A dancehall girl meets a sailor and they fall in love, but the club’s owner doesn’t want the girl to leave.
Flying G-Men Flying G-Men (1939) Character: Brewster's Secretary
Four flying G-Men protect America against enemy spies; one of the four assumes the identity of The Black Falcon, to befuddle the saboteurs even further.
Calling All Curs Calling All Curs (1939) Character: Nurse with saint bernard (uncredited)
The Stooges run a pet hospital and are the proud surgeons of Garçon, a prized girl poodle of socialite Mrs. Bedford . When two men posing as reporters kidnap the poodle, the boys frantically try track them down.
Good Girls Go to Paris Good Girls Go to Paris (1939) Character: Woman in Ticket Line
Jenny Swanson, a waitress on a college campus, is dying to visit Paris. Thanks to English professor Ronald Brooke, she manages to make her dream come true. Besides seeing the sights in the French capital she makes friends with a wealthy family there, the Brands.
Don't Gamble with Love Don't Gamble with Love (1936) Character: Telephone Operator
Standard tale of husband and wife living a party lifestyle. He works in a gambling hall and she occasionally models and sings. Because they want to start a family wife feels the need to change their situation. Situation is changed and husband gets a new job and then a promotion but is tricked into a bad business deal and wants to go back to his old life.
The Heckler The Heckler (1940) Character: Baseball Spectator with Spilled Mustard
An obnoxious heckler at a baseball game infuriates everybody.
You Can't Take It with You You Can't Take It with You (1938) Character: Neighbor (uncredited)
Alice, the only relatively normal member of the eccentric Sycamore family, falls in love with Tony Kirby, but his wealthy banker father and snobbish mother strongly disapprove of the match. When the Kirbys are invited to dinner to become better acquainted with their future in-laws, things don't turn out the way Alice had hoped.
Homicide Bureau Homicide Bureau (1939) Character: Secretary
After being criticized by the Citizens' League for his inability to cope with a crime wave, Police Captain Haines orders his men in the Homicide Bureau to clean up all their cases, but without violating the constitutional rights of any suspect. Detective Jim Logan is ordered to meet the incoming new-head of the Police Department lab and internal affairs, J.G. Bliss, and takes an instant dislike to her over her attitude toward criminal's rights.
Girls Can Play Girls Can Play (1937) Character: Waitress May
The Hollywood Post's sports writer, Jimmy Jones (Charles Quigley), yearns to be a crime reporter, and thus looks for foul play on even the most routine assignments. In writing a piece about a girl's softball team, Jimmy discovers that their sponsor, Foy Harris (John Gallaudet), is a notorious racketeer who has supposedly gone straight. Jimmy suspects Foy is still up to no good. He begins hanging around the team to do a bit of snooping, and also to be near the cute new pitcher, Ann Casey (Jacqueline Wells).
Pie a la Maid Pie a la Maid (1938) Character: Waitress
Charley falls for a waitress who mistakes him for a gangster.
Girls' School Girls' School (1938) Character: Teacher (uncredited)
Wealthy high school girls are sent to a boarding school to learn proper etiquette. Linda Simpson stays out all night. She tells her roommate, Betty Fleet, that it was because she's planning to elope. Linda gets in trouble when the faculty finds out from a monitor's report submitted by reluctant Natalie Freeman, a poor girl attending on scholarship.
False Alarms False Alarms (1936) Character: Mimi (uncredited)
Three inept firemen try to avoid being fired by their increasingly exasperated chief.
Convicted Woman Convicted Woman (1940) Character: May Sorenson
A reporter and a lawyer investigate a women's prison and help an inmate who does not belong there.
Slippery Silks Slippery Silks (1936) Character: Sales Clerk (uncredited)
The Stooges are carpenters who inherit a fancy dress boutique. They put on a fashion show with dresses they've designed based on furniture. During the show the owner of a antique box the stooges wrecked shows up and a wild cream puff fight ensues.
Holiday Holiday (1938) Character: Maid (uncredited)
Johnny Case, a freethinking financier, has finally found the girl of his dreams — Julia Seton, the spoiled daughter of a socially prominent millionaire — and she's agreed to marry him. But when Johnny plans a holiday for the two to enjoy life while they are still young, his fiancée has other plans & that is for Johnny to work in her father's bank!
The Lady Objects The Lady Objects (1938) Character: Student
A former college football hero and his college sweetheart get married. Marital turmoil ensues as her criminal law practice soars while he cannot get his career as an architect off the ground. They separate, and the man begins making extra money by singing in a nightclub. When he is unjustly accused of murder, it is up to his estranged wife to defend him in court.
Crash Goes the Hash Crash Goes the Hash (1944) Character: Party guest with spilled lemonade
Its suspected that a society matron, Mrs. Van Bustle, will marry the exotic Prince Shaam. To get the story, reporters Curly, Larry and Moe take jobs in her mansion as a cook and two butlers. The parrot climbing into the turkey scene is a Stooge classic. This was the last of many Stooge appearances by supporting actor Bud Jamison, who passed away in September, 1944, at the age of 50. First appearance by Stooge supporting actress Judy Malcolm.
Golden Boy Golden Boy (1939) Character: Anna 'Duchess'
Despite his talent as a musician, a city boy decides to become a boxer. He's successful as a fighter — much to the dismay of his parents. When gangsters try to buy a piece of him, he begins to have second thoughts.



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