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The Luckiest Girl in the World (1936)
Character: Doorman (as Sam Adams)
A wealthy society girl must live on $150 a month to prove to her father that she can stand being married to a poor man.
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Hill-Tillies (1936)
Character: Hermit (as Sam Adams)
The girls camp out in the woods for a publicity stunt.
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Treasure Blues (1935)
Character: Pancake House Manager (as Sam Adams)
Thelma and Patsy follow a map looking for treasure.
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Umpa (1933)
Character: Trial Policeman
Jack Osterman is smitten with a woman on a park bench, and cannot stop saying the word "Umpa" for the rest of the film, which involves his treatment by a doctor and his singing and dancing temptress nurses. Somewhere between utterly silly and consummately brilliant with its fully rhyming dialogue, "Umpa" is the catchword for that enduring urge that makes people do ludicrous things with absolute determination.
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We Live Again (1934)
Character: Peasant (uncredited)
Nekhludoff, a Russian nobleman serving on a jury, discovers that the young girl on trial, Katusha, is someone he once seduced and abandoned and that he himself bears responsibility for reducing her to crime. He sets out to redeem her and himself in the process.
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Foreign Correspondent (1940)
Character: Van Meer's Impersonator (uncredited)
American crime reporter John Jones is reassigned to Europe as a foreign correspondent to cover the imminent war. When he walks into the middle of an assassination and stumbles on a spy ring, he seeks help from a beautiful politician’s daughter and an urbane English journalist to uncover the truth.
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Violent Is the Word for Curly (1938)
Character: Professor Feinstein (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.
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Million Dollar Legs (1932)
Character: Secretary of State (uncredited)
A small country on the verge of bankruptcy is persuaded to enter the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics as a means of raising money.
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Amateur Crook (1937)
Character: Policeman
Jerry Cummings, a mining engineer, has pledged a large diamond on a short-term note to a pair of crooked loan sharks, Crone and Jan Jaffin, and heads for Mexico. His daughter Betsy, posing as a jewel thief called Mary Layton, is working to keep the crooks from absconding with the jewel, and her efforts are hindered greatly by an artist, Jimmy Baxter, who thinks she is a crook and Crone and Jaffin the good guys.
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Million Dollar Racket (1937)
Character: Tim Henessey
Millionaire Larry Duane is posing as his own chauffeur while touring the West and meets Molly Hennessey. They have a small romance until it is ended when her father strikes oil and moves his family east to satistify his wife's social aspirations. Larry also return east to close his estate for the summer, but stays on, still posing as the chauffeur, when he learns that Molly's family is renting the place.
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It's A Small World (1935)
Character: Minor Role (uncredited)
Socialite, privileged, Jane Dale and lawyer Bill Shevlin meet in an automobile accident at night, on a dirt road, in a storm, near a hick town which fleeces travelers through corrupt law enforcement.
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Mutiny in the Arctic (1941)
Character: First Officer Swenson (uncredited)
A pair head to the frozen wastes with an expedition in search of radium deposits. Certain members of the group succumb to greed, plotting to bump off the others and claim the radium for themselves.
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Dirty Work (1933)
Character: Jessup
Stan and Ollie are chimney sweeps working at the home of mad scientist Professor Noodle.
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Pick a Star (1937)
Character: Sheriff
A Cinderella story of a young country girl who comes to Hollywood and achieves movie stardom with the help of a publicity man.
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Death of a Saleswoman (2006)
Character: Ron Kanger
Top-ranking RubberTubber saleswoman Agatha J. Ruby was brutally beaten and shot on her morning jog by an unknown assailant. Over six thousand dollars worth of her best plastic storage ware was stolen from her trunk. Nearly all 200 residents in her hometown of Mametville, Washington knew her personally. All were named as suspects. See if you can figure out her killer.
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The Voice of Bugle Ann (1936)
Character: Farmer (uncredited)
A Missouri farmer's (Lionel Barrymore) son (Eric Linden) loves the daughter (Maureen O'Sullivan) of a neighbor who has killed the farmer's foxhound.
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Thank Your Lucky Stars (1943)
Character: Bartender in Bette Davis Number (uncredited)
An Eddie Cantor look-alike organizes an all-star show to help the war effort.
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