Lady in the Lake


5:45 pm - 8:00 pm, Thursday, January 1 on WNYW Movies! (5.2)

Average User Rating: 9.23 (13 votes)
My Rating: Sign in or Register to view last vote

Add to Favorites


About this Broadcast
-

Subjective camera work allows the viewer to see this film-noir mystery transpire through the eyes of a private detective who finds murder while investigating the case of a missing woman. The script was adapted from the Raymond Chandler novel; and Robert Montgomery directed and stars as private eye Philip Marlowe.

1946 English
Mystery & Suspense Romance Mystery Crime Drama Adaptation Crime Suspense/thriller

Cast & Crew
-

Robert Montgomery (Actor) .. Philip Marlowe
Audrey Totter (Actor) .. Adrienne Fromsett
Lloyd Nolan (Actor) .. Lt. DeGarmot
Tom Tully (Actor) .. Capt. Kane
Leon Ames (Actor) .. Derace Kingsby
Jayne Meadows (Actor) .. Mildred Havelend
Morris Ankrum (Actor) .. Eugene Grayson
Lila Leeds (Actor) .. Receptionist
Richard Simmons (Actor) .. Chris Lavery
Ellen Ross (Actor) .. Elevator Girl
William Roberts (Actor) .. Artist
Kathleen Lockhart (Actor) .. Mrs. Grayson
Ellay Mort (Actor) .. Chrystal Kingsby
Cy Kendall (Actor) .. Jaibi
Ralph Dunn (Actor) .. Sergeant
William McKeever Riley (Actor) .. Bunny
Wheaton Chambers (Actor) .. Property Clerk
Frank Orth (Actor) .. Greer
Robert B. Williams (Actor) .. Detective
Dick Simmons (Actor) .. Chris Lavery
Fred Sherman (Actor) .. Reporter
Jack Davis (Actor) .. Policeman
John Gallaudet (Actor) .. Policeman
Thomas Murray (Actor) .. Policeman
George Magrill (Actor) .. Policeman
Budd Fine (Actor) .. Policeman
John Webb Dillon (Actor) .. Policeman
Robert Spencer (Actor) .. Marlowe's Double
William 'Billy' Newell (Actor) .. Drunk
Eddie Acuff (Actor) .. Coroner
Nina Ross (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Charles Bradstreet (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
George Travell (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
William O'Leary (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Bert Moorhouse (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Florence Stephens (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Sandra Morgan (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Fred Santley (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Laura Treadwell (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Kay Wiley (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Frank Dae (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
David Cavendish (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Jim Nolan (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Sherry Hall (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Ann Lawrence (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Roger Cole (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
James Nolan (Actor) .. Party Guest

More Information
-

No Logo
No Logo
No Logo

Did You Know..
-

Robert Montgomery (Actor) .. Philip Marlowe
Born: May 21, 1904
Died: September 27, 1981
Birthplace: Fishkill Landing, New York, United States
Trivia: Actor/director/producer. In his early career, from the late '20s to the early '40s, Montgomery was an amiable light comedian and dramatic actor, appearing in almost 40 sound films before 1935. He starred opposite Norma Shearer in Private Lives (1931), Joan Crawford in The Last of Mrs. Cheyney (1937), Carole Lombard in Hitchcock's comedy Mr. and Mrs. Smith (1941) and was nominated for an Academy Award for Night Must Fall (1937) and Here Comes Mr. Jordan (1941). His career took a more serious turn after his stint in World War II. For his first film after returning, They Were Expendable (1945), Montgomery not only starred but assisted John Ford in the direction. He also starred in and directed the Raymond Chandler detective thriller Lady in the Lake, noted for its unique first-person point of view. His attentions then turned to politics and television. Montgomery gave "friendly" testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) and by the mid '50s was a consultant to Republican President Eisenhower. As a prestigious television producer, he supervised the '50s dramatic anthology series Eye Witness (1953) and Robert Montgomery Presents (1950-57), which offered his daughter Elizabeth her acting debut and which won him an early Emmy Award in 1952.
Audrey Totter (Actor) .. Adrienne Fromsett
Born: December 20, 1917
Died: December 12, 2013
Trivia: An actress since high school, Audrey Totter was by 1939 a well-established radio performer. Signed to an MGM contract in 1945, Totter played brittle, no-nonsense leading ladies and femme fatales in such films as The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946) and Lady in the Lake (1946). During her MGM years, Totter starred in the radio sitcom Meet Millie, but was contractually prevented from appearing in the TV version (she was replaced by Eleana Verdugo). As her film career waned, Totter agreed to sign on as a regular on the 1958 TV Western Cimarron City. In 1962, Audrey Totter co-starred with Stanley Holloway in the weekly sitcom Our Man Higgins; ten years later, she came out of retirement to play a recurring role on still another TV series, Medical Center. Her final acting role was on a 1987 episode of Murder, She Wrote. Totter died in 2013, just days before her 96th birthday.
Lloyd Nolan (Actor) .. Lt. DeGarmot
Born: August 11, 1902
Died: September 27, 1985
Trivia: The son of a San Francisco shoe factory owner, American actor Lloyd Nolan made it clear early on that he had no intention of entering the family business. Nolan developed an interest in acting while in college, at the expense of his education -- it took him five years to get through Santa Clara College, and he flunked out of Stanford, all because of time spent in amateur theatricals. Attempting a "joe job" on a freighter, Nolan gave it up when the freighter burned to the waterline. In 1927, he began studying at the Pasadena Playhouse, living on the inheritance left him by his father. Stock company work followed, and in 1933 Nolan scored a Broadway hit as vengeful small-town dentist Biff Grimes in One Sunday Afternoon (a role played in three film versions by Gary Cooper, James Cagney, and Dennis Morgan, respectively -- but never by Nolan). Nolan's first film was Stolen Harmony (1935); his breezy urban manner and Gaelic charm saved the actor from being confined to the bad guy parts he played so well, and by 1940 Nolan was, if not a star, certainly one of Hollywood's most versatile second-echelon leading men. As film historian William K. Everson has pointed out, the secret to Nolan's success was his integrity -- the audience respected his characters, even when he was the most cold-blooded of villains. The closest Nolan got to film stardom was a series of B detective films made at 20th Century-Fox from 1940 to 1942, in which he played private eye Michael Shayne -- a "hard-boiled dick" character long before Humphrey Bogart popularized this type as Sam Spade. Nolan was willing to tackle any sort of acting, from movies to stage to radio, and ultimately television, where he starred as detective Martin Kane in 1951; later TV stints would include a season as an IRS investigator in the syndicated Special Agent 7 (1958), and three years as grumpy-growley Dr. Chegley on the Diahann Carroll sitcom Julia (1969-1971). In 1953, Nolan originated the role of the paranoid Captain Queeg in the Broadway play The Caine Mutiny Court Martial, wherein he'd emerge from a pleasant backstage nap to play some of the most gut-wrenching "character deterioration" scenes ever written. Never your typical Hollywood celebrity, Nolan publicly acknowledged that he and his wife had an autistic son, proudly proclaiming each bit of intellectual or social progress the boy would make -- this at a time when many image-conscious movie star-parents barely admitted even having children, normal or otherwise. Well liked by his peers, Nolan was famous (in an affectionate manner) for having a photographic memory for lines but an appallingly bad attention span in real life; at times he was unable to give directions to his own home, and when he did so the directions might be three different things to three different people. A thorough professional to the last, Nolan continued acting in sizeable roles into the 1980s; he was terrific as Maureen O'Sullivan's irascible stage-star husband in Woody Allen's Hannah and Her Sisters (1986). Lloyd Nolan's last performance was as an aging soap opera star on an episode of the TV series Murder She Wrote; star Angela Lansbury, fiercely protective of an old friend and grand trouper, saw to it that Nolan's twilight-years reliance upon cue cards was cleverly written into the plot line of the episode.
Tom Tully (Actor) .. Capt. Kane
Born: August 21, 1908
Died: April 21, 1982
Trivia: Unable to meet the exacting academic requirements of the Naval Academy, Colorado-born Tom Tully entered the service branch of his choice as a common seaman. Following this, Tully worked as a junior reporter for the Denver Post. He decided to become a radio actor simply because the money was better. After several theatrical flops, Tully managed to hitch himself to a success with Eugene O'Neill's Ah, Wilderness. In 1944, he arrived in Hollywood to appear in I'll Be Seeing You. Among his many tough-but-tender screen characterizations was the role of the first commander of the "Caine" in 1954's The Caine Mutiny, a performance which earned Tully an Oscar nomination. From 1954 through 1960, Tom Tully essayed the role of Inspector Matt Grebb on the TV detective series Lineup (aka San Francisco Beat).
Leon Ames (Actor) .. Derace Kingsby
Born: January 20, 1903
Died: October 12, 1993
Trivia: Hollywood's favorite "dear old dad," Leon Ames began his stage career as a sleek, dreamy-eyed matinee idol in 1925. He was still billing himself under his real name, Leon Waycoff, when he entered films in 1931. His best early leading role was as the poet-hero of the stylish terror piece Murders in the Rue Morgue (1932). In 1933, Ames was one of the founding members of the Screen Actors Guild, gaining a reputation amongst producers as a political firebrand--which may have been why his roles diminished in size during the next few years (Ironically, when Ames was president of the SAG, his conservatism and willingness to meet management halfway incurred the wrath of the union's more liberal wing). Ames played many a murderer and caddish "other man" before he was felicitously cast as the kindly, slightly befuddled patriarch in Meet Me in St. Louis (1944). He would play essentially this same character throughout the rest of his career, starring on such TV series as Life With Father (1952-54) and Father of the Bride (1961). When, in 1963, he replaced the late Larry Keating in the role of Alan Young's neighbor on Mr. Ed, Ames' fans were astounded: his character had no children at all! Off screen, the actor was the owner of a successful, high profile Los Angeles automobile dealership. In 1963, he was the unwilling focus of newspaper headlines when his wife was kidnapped and held for ransom. In one of his last films, 1983's Testament, Leon Ames was reunited with his Life With Father co-star Lurene Tuttle.
Jayne Meadows (Actor) .. Mildred Havelend
Born: September 27, 1920
Died: April 26, 2015
Birthplace: Wuchang, Heilongjiang
Trivia: The daughter of Episcopal missionaries, Jayne Meadows was born in China; she spoke nothing but Chinese until her parents returned to America in the early 1930s. The sister of Honeymooners co-star Audrey Meadows, Jayne Meadows began her film career in the mid-1940s as a contract player at MGM. Her velvety voice and self-confident bearing ruled out her being cast as simpering ingénues: Meadows excelled as cold-blooded "other women," vitriolic divorcees, and neurotic murderesses. Her best screen role was the double- and triple-crossing Mildred Haveland in Lady in the Lake (1946). For nearly five decades, Jayne was harmoniously married to her second husband, TV personality Steve Allen, with whom she has co-starred on dozens of variety programs and game shows, as well as Steve Allen's memorable PBS miniseries Meeting of Minds. Both she and her husband were nominated for Emmy Awards for their joint guest appearance on the TV series LA Law. Her more regular TV work included the third-billed role of Nurse Chambers on Medical Center (1969-73) and the part of Ken Howard's mother on the 1983 "dramedy" It's Not Easy. Meadows made an indelible impression through the power of her voice alone as Billy Crystal's gushing, unseen mom in the two City Slickers film comedies of the 1990s. She continued acting and appearing on-screen until the late 2000s; she died in 2015, at age 95.
Morris Ankrum (Actor) .. Eugene Grayson
Born: August 28, 1897
Died: September 02, 1964
Trivia: American actor Morris Ankrum graduated from the University of Southern California with a law degree, then went on to an associate professorship in economics at the University of California at Berkeley. Here he founded a collegiate little theatre, eventually turning his hobby into a vocation as a teacher and director at the Pasadena Playhouse. (He was much admired by his students, including such future luminaries as Robert Preston and Raymond Burr.) Having already changed his name from Nussbaum to Ankrum for professional reasons, Ankrum was compelled to undergo another name change when he signed a Paramount Pictures contract in the 1930s; in his first films, he was billing as Stephen Morris. Reverting to Morris Ankrum in 1939, the sharp-featured, heavily eyebrowed actor flourished in strong character roles, usually of a villainous nature, throughout the 1940s. By the 1950s, Ankrum had more or less settled into "authority" roles in science-fiction films and TV programs. Among his best known credits in this genre were Rocketship X-M (1950), Red Planet Mars (1952), Flight to Mars (1952), Invaders From Mars (1953) (do we detect a subtle pattern here?), Earth Vs. the Flying Saucers (1956) and From the Earth to the Moon (1958). The fact that Morris Ankrum played innumerable Army generals was fondly invoked in director Joe Dante's 1993 comedy Matinee: the military officer played by Kevin McCarthy in the film-within-a-film Mant is named General Ankrum.
Lila Leeds (Actor) .. Receptionist
Born: January 28, 1928
Richard Simmons (Actor) .. Chris Lavery
Born: July 12, 1948
Died: July 13, 2024
Birthplace: New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
Trivia: Both his parents were vaudeville and burlesque performers. His first job was selling pralines on street corners in the French Quarter of New Orleans when he was 8 years old. Took the name "Richard" after an uncle who paid for his college tuition. Was an obese child, weighing 200 lbs in the eighth grade and 268 lbs when he graduated high school. Considered becoming a priest before entering college to study art. While living in Florence, Italy as an exchange student, he appeared in many television commercials including one where he played a dancing meatball. Around the age of 20 he lost 149 lbs in two and a half months. His starvation diet landed him in the hospital and caused all his hair to fall out. The experience inspired him to learn about healthy dieting and exercise. Owns 400 pairs of his trademark Dolfin brand shorts. Collects art glass and dolls, and has over 400 dolls he displays on a rotating basis at his Hollywood Hills home. His 65 fitness videos have sold over 20 million copies. With the help of Congressmen Zach Wamp and Ron Kind, he introduced the Fit Kids Bill in favor of funding physical education in schools and has testified on its behalf.
Ellen Ross (Actor) .. Elevator Girl
William Roberts (Actor) .. Artist
Kathleen Lockhart (Actor) .. Mrs. Grayson
Born: August 09, 1894
Died: February 18, 1978
Trivia: British stage actress Kathleen Lockhart made infrequent American film appearances between 1936 and 1954. She was occasionally cast opposite her more famous husband, character actor Gene Lockhart; in 1938 the Lockharts portrayed Mr. and Mrs. Bob Cratchit in MGM's A Christmas Carol (1938). One of her better-known film roles was as the wife of magazine editor Albert Dekker in the Oscar-winning Gentleman's Agreement. After the death of her husband in 1957, Lockhart made no further acting appearances. Kathleen Lockhart was the mother of actress June Lockhart and the grandmother of actress Anne Lockhart.
Ellay Mort (Actor) .. Chrystal Kingsby
Cy Kendall (Actor) .. Jaibi
Born: March 10, 1898
Died: July 22, 1953
Trivia: Cyrus W. Kendall was eight years old when he made his acting debut at the fabled Pasadena Playhouse. As an adult, the portly Kendall became a charter member of the Playhouse's Eighteen Actors Inc., acting in and/or directing over 100 theatrical productions. In films from 1936, he was usually typecast as an abrasive, cigar-chomping detective, gangster or machine politician. He showed up in roles both large and small in feature films, and was prominently cast in several of MGM's Crime Does Not Pay short subjects. Typical Kendall assignments of the 1940s included Jumbo Madigan in Alias Boston Blackie (1941) and "Honest" John Travers in Outlaw Trail (1944). Remaining active into the early years of live television, Cyrus W. Kendall essayed several guest spots on the 1949 quiz show/anthology Armchair Detective, and co-starred with Robert Bice, Spencer Chan and Herb Ellis on the Hollywood-based ABC weekly Mysteries of Chinatown (1949-50).
Ralph Dunn (Actor) .. Sergeant
Born: January 01, 1902
Died: February 19, 1968
Trivia: Ralph Dunn used his burly body and rich, theatrical voice to good effect in hundreds of minor feature-film roles and supporting appearances in two-reel comedies. He came to Hollywood during the early talkie era, beginning his film career with 1932's The Crowd Roars. A huge man with a withering glare, Dunn was an ideal "opposite" for short, bumbling comedians like Lou Costello in the 1944 Abbott and Costello comedy In Society, Dunn plays the weeping pedestrian who explains that he doesn't want to go to Beagle Street because that's where a two-ton safe fell on his head and killed him. A frequent visitor to the Columbia short subjects unit, Dunn shows up in the Three Stooges comedy Mummie's Dummies as the ancient Egyptian swindled at the Stooges' used chariot lot. Ralph Dunn kept busy into the '60s, appearing in such TV series as Kitty Foyle and such films as Black Like Me (1964).
William McKeever Riley (Actor) .. Bunny
Wheaton Chambers (Actor) .. Property Clerk
Born: January 01, 1888
Died: January 31, 1958
Trivia: In films from 1929, mustachioed, businesslike actor Wheaton Chambers could frequently be found in serials, including Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars (1939), The Adventures of Red Ryder (1940), The Purple Monster Strikes (1945) and The Crimson Ghost (1946). In bigger budgeted pictures, he played more than his share of bailiffs, guards and desk clerks. In the 1951 sci-fi masterpiece The Day the Earth Stood Still, Chambers plays the jeweller who appraises Klaatu's (Michael Rennie) extraterrestrial diamonds. When he was afforded screen billing, which wasn't often, Wheaton Chambers preferred to be identified as J. Wheaton Chambers.
Frank Orth (Actor) .. Greer
Born: February 21, 1880
Died: March 17, 1962
Trivia: Moonfaced American actor Frank Orth came to films from vaudeville, where he was usually co-billed with wife Ann Codee. Orth and Codee continued appearing together in a series of two-reel comedies in the early '30s, before he graduated to features with 1935's The Unwelcome Stranger. From that point until his retirement in 1959, Orth usually found himself behind a counter in his film appearances, playing scores of pharmacists, grocery clerks and bartenders. He had a semi-recurring role as Mike Ryan in MGM's Dr. Kildare series, and was featured as a long-suffering small town cop in Warners' Nancy Drew films. Orth was an apparent favorite of the casting department at 20th Century-Fox, where he received many of his credited screen roles. From 1951 through 1953, Frank Orth was costarred as Lieutenant Farraday on the Boston Blackie TV series.
Robert B. Williams (Actor) .. Detective
Born: January 01, 1905
Died: January 01, 1978
Trivia: Character actor, onscreen from 1937.
Dick Simmons (Actor) .. Chris Lavery
Born: August 19, 1913
Died: January 11, 2003
Trivia: A professional pilot, mustachioed Richard Simmons was reportedly discovered by Louis B. Mayer while vacationing on a dude ranch near Palm Springs, CA. Mayer signed the strapping six-footer to a stock contract right then and there, promising the neophyte "outdoor roles." As it turned out, the tycoon couldn't quite keep his promise and Simmon's roles -- in such fare as Sergeant York (1941), Thousands Cheer (1943), Love Laughs at Andy Hardy (1946), and Battle Circus (1953) -- proved minor. In fact, the actor had to pay his dues in little more than walk-ons for nearly a decade before finally reaching stardom -- and then it was on the small screen. Filmed in color in central California, Sergeant Preston of the Yukon teamed Simmons with Yukon King, a handsome malamute, and Rex, an equally impressive stallion, and the trio became a mainstay on children's television from 1955 to 1958 and in syndication ever since. Simmons, who also guest starred on such shows as Perry Mason, Rawhide, The Brady Bunch, and ChiPS, should not be confused with the frenetic video exercise guru of the same name.
Fred Sherman (Actor) .. Reporter
Jack Davis (Actor) .. Policeman
Died: January 01, 1968
John Gallaudet (Actor) .. Policeman
Born: January 01, 1903
Trivia: The son of an Episcopal priest, John Gallaudet commenced his professional acting career after graduating from Williams College. He appeared on both Broadway and in stock opposite actors ranging from Fred Astaire to Helen Hayes. The slight, thinnish-haired Gallaudet spent several years in the 1930s as the resident character star of Columbia Pictures' "B" unit, playing everything from kindhearted doctors to serpentlike crooks. He owns the distinction of being one the few actors to ever "murder" Rita Hayworth, dispatching the lovely young actress with a poisoned baseball glove in the 1937 potboiler Girls Can Play. Active in films until the 1950s, John Gallaudet was well known and highly regarded throughout the film community for his off-camera vocation as a champion golfer.
Thomas Murray (Actor) .. Policeman
George Magrill (Actor) .. Policeman
Born: January 05, 1900
Died: May 31, 1952
Trivia: George Magrill entered films in 1921 as a general-purpose bit player. Magrill's imposing physique and dexterity enabled him to make a good living as a stunt man throughout the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s. From time to time, he'd have speaking roles as bank guards, cops, sailors, truck drivers and chauffeurs. On those rare occasions that he'd receive screen credit, George Magrill was usually identified as "Thug," a part he played to the hilt in westerns, crime mellers and serials.
Budd Fine (Actor) .. Policeman
Born: September 10, 1894
John Webb Dillon (Actor) .. Policeman
Born: February 06, 1877
Died: December 20, 1949
Trivia: A darkly handsome actor from England, John Webb Dillon was a matinee idol with the Steinach-Hards stock company in Westchester, NY, before entering the pioneering film industry with Biograph, Edison, and Thanhouser, in the very early 1910s. Typecast as a smooth villain, Dillon played the Sheriff of Nothingham to William Russell's Robin Hood (1913) and was Tybalt to Theda Bara's Juliet in Romeo and Juliet (1916). In between the skullduggery, the busy actor found time to direct comedy two-reelers for various poverty row companies, keeping busy on both sides of the camera well into the sound era. The brother of actor/director Edward Dillon, John Webb Dillon should not be confused with supporting player Jack Dillon (1866-1937) or actor/director John Francis Dillon (1883-1934).
Robert Spencer (Actor) .. Marlowe's Double
William 'Billy' Newell (Actor) .. Drunk
Born: January 06, 1894
Birthplace: Millville, New Jersey, USA
Trivia: In films from 1935 to 1964, American character actor William "Billy" Newell was nearly always seen with his hat tilted backward and with a spent cigarette or wad of gum in his mouth. This is because Newell was usually cast as a wise-lipped reporter or news photographer. One of his largest assignments in this vein was as news-hound Speed Martin in the 1940 Republic serial Mysterious Dr. Satan. William Newell also essayed countless functional bit roles, such as the liquor-store proprietor in the 1945 Oscar-winner The Lost Weekend. Hal Erickson, Rovi
Eddie Acuff (Actor) .. Coroner
Born: January 01, 1908
Died: December 17, 1956
Trivia: The brother of country/western singer Roy Acuff, actor Eddie Acuff drifted to Hollywood in the early 1930s, where he almost immediately secured day-player work at Warner Bros. studios. From his 1934 debut in Here Comes the Navy onward, Acuff showed up in film after film as reporters, photographers, delivery men, sailors, shop clerks, and the occasional western comical sidekick. Acuff's most memorable acting stint occured after actor Irving Bacon left Columbia's Blondie series. From 1946 through 1949, Eddie Acuff made nine Blondie appearances as the hapless postman who was forever being knocked down by the eternally late-for-work Dagwood Bumstead (Arthur Lake).
Nina Ross (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Charles Bradstreet (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Trivia: An attractive if undistinguished secondary male lead, Charles Bradstreet had a career of a little more than a half-decade in Hollywood, and might well be totally forgotten today, but for a role that he only took very reluctantly. Born in Maine, he had no real aspirations as an actor, but chanced to be asked to read at an audition to which he'd accompanied his own brother. From that beginning, which propelled him into the leading role of the play in question, he got his first taste of professional acting. An abortive entre to Columbia Pictures was followed by a short stint at MGM and then a period freelancing from 1947 onward. That year, he took the role of Professor Stevens, the handsome (if somewhat bland) scientist who finds himself in the midst of a nest of monsters in Abbott And Costello Meet Frankenstein -- it wasn't a movie he had much faith in (as indicated by some aspects of his performance in the finished film), but it is probably the only movie for which he is remembered. Bradstreet worked in a handful of subsequent films and then left the business, preferring to make his living in real estate. He passed away in 2004 at the age of 86.
George Travell (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
William O'Leary (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Born: August 24, 1887
Died: June 24, 1954
Trivia: Lead actor, onscreen from the '80s.
Bert Moorhouse (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Born: November 20, 1894
Florence Stephens (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Sandra Morgan (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Fred Santley (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Born: January 01, 1888
Died: January 01, 1953
Laura Treadwell (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Born: January 01, 1878
Died: January 01, 1960
Kay Wiley (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Frank Dae (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Born: May 15, 1882
Died: August 29, 1959
Trivia: A gray-haired, distinguished looking actor from the legitimate stage, Frank Dae usually played pompous judges, police chiefs, and senators. Busiest in the 1940s, when he appeared in literally hundreds of films (often unbilled), Dae's career lasted well into the '50s and also included some television work.
David Cavendish (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Born: January 01, 1893
Died: January 01, 1960
Jim Nolan (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Born: November 29, 1915
Sherry Hall (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Born: August 08, 1892
Trivia: American actor Sherry Hall popped up in innumerable bit roles between 1932 and 1951. Hall was typically cast as reporters, bartenders, court clerks, and occasional pianists. He was particularly busy at 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s, nearly always in microscopic parts. Sherry Hall's larger screen assignments included the "TV Scientist" in Dick Tracy Returns (1938), Robert Buelle in The Shadow Returns (1946), John Gilvray in The Prowler (1951), and Mr. Manners in The Well, a 1951 film populated almost exclusively by small-part players.
Ann Lawrence (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
Roger Cole (Actor) .. Christmas Party Guest
James Nolan (Actor) .. Party Guest

Before / After
-