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Way Up Thar (1935)
Character: Jennie Kurtz
This 1934 short subject was Mack Sennett's final directorial effort for Educational Pictures, and comedienne Joan Davis' film debut. It features Buster Keaton's Mother and Sister, Myra and Louise, respectively. A very young Roy Rogers (billed as Leonard Slye) is featured as a member of the Sons of the Pioneers, and sings a few songs during the course of the movie.
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Hollywood Hobbies (1939)
Character: Self (uncredited)
In this short film, two starstruck movie fans hire a tour guide and see a plethora of Hollywood stars.
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Millions in the Air (1935)
Character: Singer
The daughter of a radio-program sponsor wants to get on the air too, but her father doesn't allow it, so she enters an amateur contest on his radio program under an assumed name.
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Let's Join Joanie (1950)
Character: Joanie Davis
Salesgirl Joanie tries to impress a handsome man by joining a fitness club.
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Screen Snapshots Series 21 No. 1 (1941)
Character: Self
This edition of Screen Snapshots has more of a vaudeville flavor as opposed to Ralph Staub's usual candid-camera at home with the stars offerings. Ken Murray, assisted by the Brewer Twins, is the MC, while the Andrews Sisters sing "In Apple Blossom Time" and the pre-"Uncle Miltie" Milton Berle plays his clarinet. The rest of the players, with contract-player faces belonging to 20th-Century Fox, RKO Radio, Universal and Columbia, just pass through. Production Number 3851.
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Just Around the Corner (1938)
Character: Kitty
Penny helps her idealistic architect father get his dream of a slum clearance project; The little miss dances with Corporal Jones.
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Sailor's Lady (1940)
Character: Myrtle
Sailor is going to marry his girlfriend when he returns, but she becomes foster mother to baby whose parents are accidentally killed. The baby is accidentally left on board a visiting battleship.
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Around the World (1943)
Character: Joan Davis
Bandleader Kay Kyser takes his troupe of nutty musicians, goofball comics and pretty girl singers on a tour around the world to entertain the troops during World War II.
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Yokel Boy (1942)
Character: Molly Malone
A film company hires a gangster to mock himself holding up a bank, but he succeeds too well and makes off with the money. But all ends well.
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Free, Blonde and 21 (1940)
Character: Nellie
Stories of women who live in an all-women hotel. One (Bari) works hard and marries a millionaire; another (Hughes) cheats and goes to jail.
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If You Knew Susie (1948)
Character: Susie Parker
In the small town of Brookford, everybody can trace their ancestors back to the Revolutionary War, except Sam and Susie Parker. One day, however, they find a letter written by George Washington that mentions the bravery of a Revolutionary War hero named Parker.
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Make Mine Laughs (1949)
Character: (archive footage)
A kind of filmed vaudeville show, using old material from RKO films and some new.
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Manhattan Heartbeat (1940)
Character: Edna Higgins
A couple can't make ends meet. He is an airplane mechanic and makes extra money testing planes. When the baby arrives things get better.
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Life Begins in College (1937)
Character: Inez
When a wealthy Indian student endows the college so they can keep the football coach rumor has it the Indian has played professionally and can't be on the team.
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Harem Girl (1952)
Character: Susie Perkins
The palace secretary to a princess foils a sheik's plot to grab royal oil.
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On the Avenue (1937)
Character: Miss Katz
A new Broadway show starring Gary Blake shamelessly lampoons the rich Carraway family. To get her own back, daughter Mimi sets out to ensnare Blake, but the courtship is soon for real, to the annoyance of his co-star, hoofing chanteuese Mona Merrick.
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For Beauty's Sake (1941)
Character: Dottie Nickerson
A woman-hater who inherits a beauty salon gets a new perspective on females after capturing a gang of thieves.
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Bunker Bean (1936)
Character: Mabel - Bunker's Secretary (uncredited)
A shy office worker becomes a hero when a fortune teller calls him another Napoleon.
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Too Busy to Work (1939)
Character: Lolly
The Jones family females decide to teach Father a lesson. He's neglecting the family business to run for mayor, so they decide to neglect their household chores.
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The Groom Wore Spurs (1951)
Character: Alice Dean
Pretty female attorney Abigail "AJ" Furnival is hired to keep high-flying cowboy movie star Ben Castle out of trouble in Las Vegas. Despite his many faults, Abigail falls in love with and marries Ben, with the hope that she can mold him into the virtuous hero he plays on the screen.
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Love and Hisses (1937)
Character: Joan Dolan
As part of their public feud, Bandleader Bernie pretends a girl singer is no good so columnist Winchell promotes her in his column.
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Two Latins from Manhattan (1941)
Character: Joan Daley
Joan Daley, a New York booking/press agent, attempts to recruit two local stand-ins, Jinx Terry and Lois Morgan, when the Cuban sister-act, Marianela and Rosita she as booked into the nightclub for which she works fails to materialize. Complications arrive when the real Cuban sisters show up.
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Kansas City Kitty (1944)
Character: Polly Jasper
A piano teacher and her roommate decide to invest their savings in a music publishing company. Comedy with music.
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Hold That Ghost (1941)
Character: Camille Brewster
Two bumbling service station attendants are left as the sole beneficiaries in a gangster's will. Their trip to claim their fortune is sidetracked when they are stranded in a haunted house along with several other strangers.
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She Gets Her Man (1945)
Character: Jane 'Pilky' Pilkington
The corny daughter of a famed policewoman tries to catch a blowgun killer.
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Angel's Holiday (1937)
Character: Strivers
Lively June, teen-aged daughter of mystery writer Waldo Everett, who calls her "Angel," becomes involved in intrigue centering on movie star Pauline Kaye and her companion Stivers. Reporter Nick Moore, once sweet on Pauline, is convinced that her sudden disappearance is a publicity stunt, which is true -- until gangster Bat Regan decides to get involved.
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Sing and Be Happy (1937)
Character: Myrtle
Rival advertising firms compete for a radio show's pickle manufacturing account.
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Sally, Irene and Mary (1938)
Character: Irene Keene
Manicurists Sally, Irene and Mary hope to be Broadway entertainers. When Mary inherits an old ferry boat, they turn it into a successful supper club.
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He's My Guy (1943)
Character: Madge Donovan
The former members of a vaudeville team meet up again in a defense plant during WW II.
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Time Out for Romance (1937)
Character: Midge Dooley
A girl escapes marriage and hitchhikes with a young man in whose car a jewel thief has planted his loot.
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You Can't Have Everything (1937)
Character: Girl in YWCA (uncredited)
Starving playwright Judith Wells meets playboy writer of musicals, George Macrae, over a plate of stolen spaghetti. He persuades producer Sam Gordon to buy her ridiculous play "North Winds" just to improve his romantic chances, and even persuades her to sing in the sort of show she pretends to despise. But just when their romance is going well, Gordon's former flame Lulu reveals the ace up her sleeve...
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The Holy Terror (1937)
Character: Lili
Corky is the daughter of an officer in the Naval Air Service who, while putting on musical shows for the troops, uncovers a group of spies.
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Josette (1938)
Character: May Morris
Two young men try to wrest their father from the clutches of a gold digger but by mistake think the woman is a young nightclub singer with whom they both fall in love.
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Love That Brute (1950)
Character: Mamie Sage
The story of a crude gangster hopelessly falling for a sweet young city government employee.
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Wake Up and Live (1937)
Character: Comic Spanish Dancer
Satire on radio, built around the supposed feud between bandleader Ben Bernie and journalist Walter Winchell.
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Sun Valley Serenade (1941)
Character: Miss Carstairs
When Phil Corey's band arrives at the Idaho ski resort its pianist Ted Scott is smitten with a Norwegian refugee he has sponsored, Karen Benson. When soloist Vivian Dawn quits, Karen stages an ice show as a substitute.
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Tail Spin (1939)
Character: Babe Dugan
Trixie is a female pilot looking to win a big race to advance her career. During one race, however, her plane becomes damaged, and she needs help to repair it. She meets a Navy pilot named "Tex" Price and tries to gain his aid. Tex soon meets another pilot, Gerry, a novice who seeks to win an important upcoming race. Tex, concerned for Gerry's safety, tries to convince her not to race. But Gerry, now a rival of Trixie's, is determined to fly.
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My Lucky Star (1938)
Character: Mary Dwight
George Cabot Jr., the son of a department store owner, enrolls Kristina Nielsen, the store's sports clerk, at a university to use her as an advertisement for their fashion department. She falls for Larry Taylor, a teacher, and gets expelled.
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Thin Ice (1937)
Character: Orchestra Leader
A Swiss hotel ski instructor falls in love with a man who goes skiing every morning.
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Day-time Wife (1939)
Character: Miss Applegate
When a young wife discovers her husband of two years is involved with his beautiful secretary, she applies for a job as secretary to a business rival.
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Beautiful But Broke (1944)
Character: Dottie Duncan
Theatrical agent Waldo Main is inducted into the army, and turns his now clientless agency over to his secretary Dottie Duncan. Dottie decides to organize an all-girl orchestra to fill the void caused by so many orchestra members being called to service due to WWII, and joins struggling singers/songwriters Sally Richards and Sue Ford in this endeavor. Dottie's screwball schemes to get engagements for the group often lead to disaster.
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Two Señoritas from Chicago (1943)
Character: Daisy Baker
The Two Senoritas from Chicago are Gloria and Maria. When their goofy pal Daisy Baker passes off a discarded Portuguese play manuscript as her own, producer Rupert Shannon agrees to bankroll the production. With stars in their eyes, Gloria and Maria pretend to be a pair of Portuguese musical comedy stars, thereby winning parts in the new production. The fun begins when the play's original authors sell the same manuscript to a rival producer.
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Hold That Co-ed (1938)
Character: Lizzie Olsen
An egotistical politician believes he can win votes by turning a small college's hapless football squad into a championship team.
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She Wrote the Book (1946)
Character: Jane Featherstone
A plain-Jane math professor (Joan Davis) at a small midwestern college is talked into journeying to New York on behalf of a colleague who has written a steamy bestseller under an assumed name. When she arrives she gets a bump on the head which brings on a form of amnesia and she begins to believe she is the author of the book. Hijinks and adventures follow.
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