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The Lure of Egypt (1921)
Character: Theodore
Professor Lampton's work of excavating the tomb of Akhnaton (Ikhnaton) is held up by lack of funds, and Prince Dagmar, scion of a Balkan royal family, finances him with the ulterior motive of robbing the tomb of its treasures. Michael Amory, an artist assisting Lampton, loves Margaret, but believing her to be in love with the prince he departs with Gondo Koro, a Bedouin prophet who knows the location of the tomb. Dagmar sends Millicent, an adventuress, to obtain the information from Michael, and when Dagmar enters the tomb at night Michael surprises him. The thieves wound Michael, but they are captured and he and Margaret are reconciled.
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The Lady Fare (1929)
Character: N/A
"Willie Dime," a big, bad taxi driver, is very jealous of "Miss Eva" and it burns him up to see any fool Jelly-bean "carrying on flirtatious flirtations with her." He gets madder and "badder" as the story gets "hummier" and funnier, while smooth, suave Florian Slappey gets mixed up in all kinds of complications.
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Ship Cafe (1935)
Character: Stoker (uncredited)
The singing stoker and the vamp.
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The Money Changers (1920)
Character: Wesley Shiloh Mainwaring
Lucy Hegan, the proprietor of a settlement house for the poor, is engaged to Hugh Gordon, the head of a large pharmaceutical and chemical firm who, unknown to Lucy, is also the ringleader of a powerful drug and white slave operation in the Chinese quarter.
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Hearts in Dixie (1929)
Character: Deacon
Nappus sends his grandson north for schooling to shelter him from their community.
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Gone with the Wind (1939)
Character: Elijah (uncredited)
The spoiled daughter of a Georgia plantation owner conducts a tumultuous romance with a cynical profiteer during the American Civil War and Reconstruction Era.
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The Killer (1921)
Character: Aloysius Jackson
Claire Adams as a girl forced to marry the man she suspects killed her father. When she refuses, she is virtually kept a prisoner along with kid-brother Frankie Lee until a handsome stranger (Jack Conway) rescues them.
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Professor Creeps (1942)
Character: Telephone Man
Two cut-rate private detectives are broke, hungry and down to their last nickel. They decide to hock their banjo in order to get some money for food, and while one partner is negotiating the deal, the other one falls asleep and dreams that a wealthy society matron has hired them to investigate a string of suitors.
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Duke of the Navy (1942)
Character: Congo
A fake general sends two sailors on a wild-goose chase for buried treasure.
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Slightly Honorable (1939)
Character: Black Preacher (Uncredited)
A lawyer is framed for the murder of a young party girl and tries to clear his name.
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Court Martial (1928)
Character: Negro
During the American Civil War, A Union-Army officer is ordered by U. S. President Abraham Lincoln to bring in Belle Starr, the leader of a Missouri guerrilla band, dead or alive. However, he falls in love with her, does not bring her in, and is facing a court-martial.
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Maryland (1940)
Character: Fields
A woman tormented by the hunting death of her husband forbids her son to have anything to do with horses. But when he falls for the daughter of his father's trainer, he defies his mother by entering the Maryland Hunt.
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The Vampire's Ghost (1945)
Character: Taba
In a small African port, a tawdry bar is run by a old man named Webb Fallon. Fallon is actually a vampire, but he is becoming weary of his "life" of the past few hundred years.
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Son of Ingagi (1940)
Character: N'Gina
A newlywed couple is visited by a strange old woman who harbors a secret about the young girl's father.
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Jungle Goddess (1948)
Character: Chief M'benga
When a plane carrying the daughter of a millionaire crashes in an African jungle, two pilots set out to collect the reward. They discover that she has become the goddess of a primitive tribe. An insurgent witch doctor and fierce wild animals make escape from the jungle difficult for the trio.
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The Four Feathers (1929)
Character: Idris
An Englishman (Richard Arlen) fights in the Sudan after receiving white feathers of cowardice from his fiancee (Fay Wray) and friends.
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