The Lady Confesses


12:00 pm - 2:00 pm, Thursday, March 26 on WNYN AMG TV HDTV (39.1)

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About this Broadcast
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A bride hunts the killer of her husband's first wife. Hugh Beaumont, Mary Beth Hughes. Lucky: Edmund MacDonald. Lucille: Claudia Drake. Directed by Sam Newfield.

1945 English
Mystery & Suspense Mystery Crime Suspense/thriller Troubled Relationships

Cast & Crew
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Hugh Beaumont (Actor) .. Larry Brandon
Mary Beth Hughes (Actor) .. Vicki McGuire
Edmund MacDonald (Actor) .. Lucky Brandon
Claudia Drake (Actor) .. Lucille Compton
Emmett Vogan (Actor) .. Capt. Brown
Edward Howard (Actor) .. Harmon
Dewey Robinson (Actor) .. Steve
Carol Andrews (Actor) .. Marge
Ruth Brande (Actor) .. Gladys
Barbara Slater (Actor) .. Norma Craig
Jack George (Actor) .. Manager
Jerome Root (Actor) .. Bill

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Hugh Beaumont (Actor) .. Larry Brandon
Born: February 16, 1909
Died: May 14, 1982
Birthplace: Lawrence, Kansas, United States
Trivia: American actor Hugh Beaumont originally studied for the clergy, remaining busy as a lay minister throughout his acting career. After stage experience, Beaumont arrived in Hollywood in 1940. While most of the draftable leading men were away during World War II, Beaumont enjoyed a brief spell of stardom; his faint resemblance to actor Lloyd Nolan enabled Beaumont to inherit Nolan's screen role of detective Michael Shayne in a series of inexpensive programmers. After the war, Beaumont returned to character parts, contributing memorable moments to such films as The Blue Dahlia (1946) and The Guilt of Janet Ames (1947). He also played quite a few villains during this period; fans of Beaumont's later television work are in for a jolt as they watch the affable Hugh connive and murder his way through 1948's Money Madness. During the early 1950s, Beaumont frequently popped up in uncredited featured roles at 20th Century-Fox, most prominently in Phone Call From a Stranger (1952) as the doctor killed by drunken driver Michael Rennie, and in The Revolt of Mamie Stover as the Honolulu cop who advises goodtime girl Jane Russell to get out of town. In 1957, Beaumont was cast as philosophy-dispensing suburban dad Ward Cleaver on the popular sitcom Leave It to Beaver (he replaced Casey Adams, who played Ward in the 1955 pilot). While he despaired that the series might ruin his chances for good film roles, Beaumont remained with Beaver until its cancellation in 1963. Hugh Beaumont retired from show business in the late 1960s, launching a second career as a successful Christmas tree farmer.
Mary Beth Hughes (Actor) .. Vicki McGuire
Born: November 13, 1919
Trivia: Like her contemporaries Lynn Bari and Veda Ann Borg, blonde actress Mary Beth Hughes seldom rose above "starlet" or "second-echelon star" status, even though she worked steadily and enjoyed a loyal fan following. Encouraged to pursue a theatrical career by her grandmother, a onetime actress, Hughes went from stage to films in 1938. From 1940 through 1943, Hughes was part of the "B" stable at 20th Century-Fox, playing both good and bad girls in the popular Michael Shayne series with Lloyd Nolan, and going through the usual "other woman" paces in films like Orchestra Wives (1942). She is billed second in the moody western The Ox-Bow Incident (1943), but her role is utterly expendable; in fact, she has fewer lines than George Meeker, the unbilled actor playing her husband. While her film career never really went anywhere, Hughes remained in the public eye through her many cheesecake photos in movie-oriented magazines of the era. In the mid-1950s, Hughes gave up films in favor of work as a nightclub singer/musician and television actress; she was often cast as nagging wife Clara Appleby on TV's The Red Skelton Show, possibly because she was one of the few actresses whom Skelton couldn't break up. Mary Beth Hughes briefly returned to filmmaking in the mid-1970s, playing character roles in such drive-in fare as The Working Girls (1974) and How's Your Love Life? (1977).
Edmund MacDonald (Actor) .. Lucky Brandon
Born: May 07, 1908
Died: January 01, 1951
Trivia: Muscular American general-purpose actor Edmund MacDonald entered films in 1933. MacDonald was briefly a 20th Century-Fox contractee in the early 1940s; his best role under the Fox banner was the antagonistic Sgt. Hippo in Laurel & Hardy's Great Guns (1941). At other studios, he was usually cast as plainclothes detectives or minor gangsters. Aficionados of "film noir" will remember Edmund MacDonald as Charles Haskell Jr., the foredoomed motorist who gives Tom Neal a lift in Edgar Ulmer's Detour (1945).
Claudia Drake (Actor) .. Lucille Compton
Born: January 30, 1918
Trivia: Dark-eyed American leading lady Claudia Drake made her first film appearance in the Hopalong Cassidy western False Colors. Drake went on to a variety of assignments at such second-rung studios as Republic, Monogram and PRC. Her most famous role was the other female lead in the cult classic Detour (1946); as Tom Neal's nightclub-singer girlfriend, Drake was permitted to warble "I Can't Believe That You're in Love With Me" before relinquishing Neal to top-billed Anne Savage. Claudia Drake's last film characterizations were Indian "squaws," a demeaning term even back in 1949: she played Turquoise in Indian Agent and Lucky Broken Arm in Cowboys and the Indians.
Emmett Vogan (Actor) .. Capt. Brown
Born: September 27, 1893
Died: October 06, 1964
Trivia: Character actor Emmett Vogan appeared in films from 1934 through 1956. A peppery gentleman with steel-rimmed glasses and an executive air, Vogan appeared in hundreds of films in a variety of small "take charge" roles. Evidently he had a few friends in the casting department of Universal Pictures, inasmuch as he showed up with regularity in that studio's comedies, serials and B-westerns. Comedy fans will recognize Emmett Vogan as the engineer partner of nominal leading man Charles Lang in W.C. Fields' Never Give a Sucker an Even Break (1941), and as the prosecuting attorney in the flashback sequences of Laurel and Hardy's The Bullfighters (1945).
Edward Howard (Actor) .. Harmon
Born: September 12, 1909
Died: May 23, 1963
Trivia: A dark-haired actor from Illinois who mostly portrayed "dog heavies," Edward Howard enjoyed a more substantial role in the 1945 Texas Ranger oater Three in the Saddle, attempting to steal Lorraine Miller's ranch. Long in retirement, Howard died of a cerebral hemorrhage.
Dewey Robinson (Actor) .. Steve
Born: January 01, 1898
Died: December 11, 1950
Trivia: Barrel-chested American actor Dewey Robinson was much in demand during the gangster cycle of the early '30s. Few actors could convey muscular menace and mental vacuity as quickly and as well as the mountainous Mr. Robinson. Most of his roles were bits, but he was given extended screen time as a polo-playing mobster in Edward G. Robinson's Little Giant (1933), as a bored slavemaster in the outrageously erotic "No More Love" number in Eddie Cantor's Roman Scandals (1933) and as a plug-ugly ward heeler at odds with beauty contest judge Ben Turpin in the slapstick 2-reeler Keystone Hotel (1935). Shortly before his death in 1950, Dewey Robinson had a lengthy unbilled role as a Brooklyn baseball fan in The Jackie Robinson Story, slowly metamorphosing from a brainless bigot to Jackie's most demonstrative supporter.
Carol Andrews (Actor) .. Marge
Ruth Brande (Actor) .. Gladys
Barbara Slater (Actor) .. Norma Craig
Born: December 17, 1920
Jack George (Actor) .. Manager
Born: December 11, 1888
Jerome Root (Actor) .. Bill

Before / After
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