|
Born to Be Bad (1950)
Character: Caine's Secretary (uncredited)
Christabel Caine has the face of angel and the heart of a swamp rat. She'll step on anyone to get what she wants, including her own family. A master of manipulation, she covertly breaks off the engagement of her trusting cousin, Donna, to her fabulously wealthy beau, Curtis Carey. Once married to Curtis herself, Christabel continues her affair with novelist Nick Bradley, who knows she's evil, but loves her anyway.
|
|
|
Possessed (1947)
Character: Wedding Guest (uncredited)
After being found wandering the streets of Los Angeles, a severely catatonic woman tells a doctor the complex story of how she wound up there.
|
|
|
Iron Man (1951)
Character: Minor Role (uncredited)
An ambitious coal miner is talked into becoming a boxer by his gambler brother.
|
|
|
Because of You (1952)
Character: Nurse (uncredited)
A female ex-con falls in love and hesitates to reveal her past.
|
|
|
Father of the Bride (1950)
Character: Wedding Guest (uncredited)
Proud father Stanley Banks remembers the day his daughter, Kay, got married. Starting when she announces her engagement through to the wedding itself, we learn of all the surprises and disasters along the way.
|
|
|
Singin' in the Rain (1952)
Character: Audience Member (uncredited)
In 1927 Hollywood, a silent film star falls for a chorus girl just as he and his paranoid screen partner struggle to make the difficult transition to talking pictures.
|
|
|
Blind Date (1934)
Character: Patron
A young woman is torn between a wealthy suitor who wants her body and the honest young man who wants what's best for her.
|
|
|
In the Good Old Summertime (1949)
Character: Guest (uncredited)
Two co-workers in a music shop dislike one another during business hours but unwittingly carry on an anonymous romance through the mail.
|
|
|
All My Sons (1948)
Character: N/A
During WWII, industrialist Joe Keller commits a crime and frames his business partner Herbert Deever. Years later, his sin comes back to haunt him when his son plans to marry Deever's daughter.
|
|
|
Honky Donkey (1934)
Character: Wally's Mother
Rich kid Wally brings the gang back home to play, along with their mule.
|
|
|
Jealousy (1945)
Character: Secretary
A female cabbie is suspected of killing her drunken husband.
|
|
|
Our Leading Citizen (1939)
Character: Bridge Player
Lem Schofield, a lawyer in a one-time small-town turned industrialized big city, runs his firm on examples set by Abraham Lincoln and is a friend to the poor. Clay Clinton, his late partner's son joins the firm but is anxious for fast success and considers Schofield's old-fashioned principles antiquated. Being in love with Schofield's daughter and impatient for success he moves to offices supplied by the city's most powerful industrialist, J.T. Tapley, who has plans to use Clay's good family lineage as a stepping stone to political power. The unscrupulous Tapley precipitates a strike in his factory mill which causes a rupture between the former partners. Schofield sets out to bring Tapley and his political henchmen to justice.
|
|
|
I Take This Woman (1940)
Character: Martha - Georgi's Maid (uncredited)
On return from Europe Dr. Decker foils glamour girl Georgi from jumping overboard. At Decker's suggestion to keep busy, she assists at his clinic in the slums.
|
|
|
True Confession (1937)
Character: Juror (uncredited)
A writer takes a job as a secretary because her scrupulous husband isn't bringing in the dough as an attorney. When her new employer is murdered, she can't seem to make up her mind as to whether she "dunnit" or not.
|
|
|
Thrill of a Romance (1945)
Character: Wedding Guest (uncredited)
A soldier falls in love with a newly-married woman after her husband abandons her for a business meeting on their honeymoon.
|
|
|
Faces in the Fog (1944)
Character: Juror
Tom and Cora Elliott love their active social life so much that they neglect their daughter Mary and son Les. Fred Mason, Tom's neighbor and the doctor at the defense plant employing Tom, worries about the effect that Tom and Cora's drinking and socializing have on the children....
|
|