Sylvia Scarlett


08:00 am - 10:00 am, Friday, November 14 on Turner Classic Movies ()

Average User Rating: 4.50 (2 votes)
My Rating: Sign in or Register to view last vote

Add to Favorites


About this Broadcast
-

A young woman steals some expensive lace and hopes to smuggle it from France to England with her father. To elude police, she cuts her hair short and disguises herself as a man.

1935 English
Comedy-drama Drama Romance Comedy Adaptation Crime

Cast & Crew
-

Katharine Hepburn (Actor) .. Sylvia Scarlett
Cary Grant (Actor) .. Jimmy Monkley
Brian Aherne (Actor) .. Michael Fane
Edmund Gwenn (Actor) .. Henry Scarlett
Natalie Paley (Actor) .. Lily
Dennis Moore (Actor) .. Maudie Tilt
Lennox Pawle (Actor) .. Drunk
Daisy Belmore (Actor) .. Bit
Nola Luxford (Actor) .. Bit
Daisy Goodill (Actor) .. Bit
Elsa Buchanan (Actor) .. Bit
Lilyan Irene (Actor) .. Bit
Kay Deslys (Actor) .. Bit
May Beatty (Actor) .. Bit
Thomas Braidon (Actor) .. Bit
Elspeth Dudgeon (Actor) .. Bit
Ella McKenzie (Actor) .. Bit
Roger Roughton (Actor) .. Bit
Ethel Rawson (Actor) .. Bit
Alec Harford (Actor) .. Bit
Frank Moran (Actor) .. Bit
Colin Campbell (Actor) .. Bit
Connie Lamont (Actor) .. Bit
Lorimer Johnston (Actor) .. Bit
Gwendolyn Logan (Actor) .. Bit
C. Montague Shaw (Actor) .. Bit
Elsie Mackay (Actor) .. Bit
Patricia Caron (Actor) .. Bit
Robert Hale (Actor) .. Bit
Nina Borget (Actor) .. Bit
Carmen Beretta (Actor) .. Bit
Harrington Reynolds (Actor) .. Bit
Violet Seaton (Actor) .. Bit
Pat Somerset (Actor) .. Bit
George Nardelli (Actor) .. Frenchman
Dina Smirnova (Actor) .. Russian
E.E. Clive (Actor) .. Customs Inspector
Edward Cooper (Actor) .. Customs Inspector
Olaf Hytten (Actor) .. Customs Inspector
Bunny Beatty (Actor) .. Maid
Peter Hobbes (Actor) .. Steward
Jacques Vanaire (Actor) .. Steward
Leonard Mudie (Actor) .. Steward
Adrienne D'Ambricourt (Actor) .. Stewardess
Gaston Glass (Actor) .. Purser
Michael Visaroff (Actor) .. Purser
Harold Entwistle (Actor) .. Conductor
Lionel Pape (Actor) .. Sgt. Major
Robert Adair (Actor) .. Turnkey
Harold Cheevers (Actor) .. Bobby
Dennie Moore (Actor) .. Maudie Tilt

More Information
-

No Logo
No Logo
No Logo

Did You Know..
-

Katharine Hepburn (Actor) .. Sylvia Scarlett
Born: May 12, 1907
Died: June 29, 2003
Birthplace: Hartford, Connecticut, United States
Trivia: "I'm a personality as well as an actress," Katharine Hepburn once declared. "Show me an actress who isn't a personality, and you'll show me a woman who isn't a star." Hepburn's bold, distinctive personality was apparent almost from birth. She inherited from her doctor father and suffragette mother her three most pronounced traits: an open and ever-expanding mind, a healthy body (maintained through constant rigorous exercise), and an inability to tell anything less than the truth. Hepburn was more a personality than an actress when she took the professional plunge after graduating from Bryn Mawr in 1928; her first stage parts were bits, but she always attracted attention with her distinct New England accent and her bony, sturdy frame. The actress' outspokenness lost her more jobs than she received, but, in 1932, she finally scored on Broadway with the starring role in The Warrior's Husband. She didn't want to sign the film contract offered her by RKO, so she made several "impossible" demands concerning salary and choice of scripts. The studios agreed to her terms, and, in 1932, she made her film debut opposite John Barrymore in A Bill of Divorcement (despite legends to the contrary, the stars got along quite well). Critical reaction to Hepburn's first film set the tone for the next decade: Some thought that she was the freshest and most original actress in Hollywood, while others were irritated by her mannerisms and "artificial" speech patterns. For her third film, Morning Glory (1933), Hepburn won the first of her four Oscars. But despite initial good response to her films, Hepburn lost a lot of popularity during her RKO stay because of her refusal to play the "Hollywood game." She dressed in unfashionable slacks and paraded about without makeup; refused to pose for pinup pictures, give autographs, or grant interviews; and avoided mingling with her co-workers. As stories of her arrogance and self-absorption leaked out, moviegoers responded by staying away from her films. The fact that Hepburn was a thoroughly dedicated professional -- letter-perfect in lines, completely prepared and researched in her roles, the first to arrive to the set each day and the last to leave each evening -- didn't matter in those days, when style superseded substance. Briefly returning to Broadway in 1933's The Lake, Hepburn received devastating reviews from the same critics who found her personality so bracing in The Warrior's Husband. The grosses on her RKO films diminished with each release -- understandably so, since many of them (Break of Hearts [1935], Mary of Scotland [1936]) were not very good. She reclaimed the support of RKO executives after appearing in the moneymaking Alice Adams (1935) -- only to lose it again by insisting upon starring in Sylvia Scarlett (1936), a curious exercise in sexual ambiguity that lost a fortune. Efforts to "humanize" the haughty Hepburn personality in Stage Door (1937) and the delightful Bringing Up Baby (1938) came too late; in 1938, she was deemed "box-office poison" by an influential exhibitor's publication. Hepburn's career might have ended then and there, but she hadn't been raised to be a quitter. She went back to Broadway in 1938 with a part written especially for her in Philip Barry's The Philadelphia Story. Certain of a hit, she bought the film rights to the play; thus, when it ended up a success, she was able to negotiate her way back into Hollywood on her own terms, including her choice of director and co-stars. Produced by MGM in 1940, the film version was a box-office triumph, and Hepburn had beaten the "poison" label. In her next MGM film, Woman of the Year (1942), Hepburn co-starred with Spencer Tracy, a copacetic teaming that endured both professionally and personally until Tracy's death in 1967. After several years of off-and-on films, Hepburn scored another success with 1951's The African Queen, marking her switch from youngish sophisticates to middle-aged character leads. After 1962's Long Day's Journey Into Night, Hepburn withdrew from performing for nearly five years, devoting her attention to her ailing friend and lover Tracy. She made the last of her eight screen appearances with Tracy in Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967), which also featured her niece Katharine Houghton. Hepburn won her second Oscar for this film, and her third the following year for A Lion in Winter; the fourth was bestowed 13 years later for On Golden Pond (1981). When she came back to Broadway for the 1969 musical Coco, Hepburn proved that the years had not mellowed her; she readily agreed to preface her first speech with a then-shocking profanity, and, during one performance, she abruptly dropped character to chew out an audience member for taking flash pictures. Hepburn made the first of her several television movies in 1975, co-starring with Sir Laurence Olivier in Love Among the Ruins -- and winning an Emmy award, as well. Her last Broadway appearance was in 1976's A Matter of Gravity. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, Hepburn continued to star on TV and in films, announcing on each occasion that it would be her last performance. She also began writing books and magazine articles, each of them an extension of her personality: self-centered, well-organized, succinct, and brutally frank (especially regarding herself). While she remained a staunch advocate of physical fitness, Hepburn suffered from a genetic condition, a persistent tremor that caused her head to shake -- an affliction she blithely incorporated into her screen characters. In 1994, Warren Beatty coaxed Hepburn out of her latest retirement to appear as his aristocratic grand-aunt in Love Affair. Though appearing frailer than usual, Hepburn was in complete control of herself and her craft, totally dominating her brief scenes. And into her nineties and on the threshold of her tenth decade, Katharine Hepburn remained the consummate personality, actress, and star.On June 29, 2003 Katharine Hepburn died of natural causes in Old Saybrook, Connetticut. She was 96.
Cary Grant (Actor) .. Jimmy Monkley
Born: January 18, 1904
Died: November 29, 1986
Birthplace: Horfield, Bristol, England
Trivia: British-born actor Cary Grant (born Archibald Leach) escaped his humble Bristol environs and unstable home life by joining an acrobatic troupe, where he became a stilt-walker. Numerous odd jobs kept him going until he tried acting, and, after moving to the United States, he managed to lose his accent, developing a clipped mid-Atlantic speaking style uniquely his own. After acting in Broadway musicals, Grant was signed in 1932 by Paramount Pictures to be built into leading-man material. His real name would never do for marquees, so the studio took the first initials of their top star Gary Cooper, reversed them, then filled in the "C" and "G" to come up with Cary Grant. After a year of nondescript roles, Grant was selected by Mae West to be her leading man in She Done Him Wrong (1933) and I'm No Angel(1934). A bit stiff-necked but undeniably sexy, Grant vaulted to stardom, though Paramount continued wasting his potential in second rate films. Free at last from his Paramount obligations in 1935, Grant vowed never to be strictly bound to any one studio again, so he signed a dual contract with Columbia and RKO that allowed him to choose any "outside" roles he pleased. Sylvia Scarlett (1936) was the first film to fully demonstrate Grant's inspired comic flair, which would be utilized to the utmost in such knee-slappers as The Awful Truth (1937), Bringing Up Baby (1938), His Girl Friday (1939), and The Bachelor and the Bobby Soxer (1947). (Only in Arsenic and Old Lace [1941] did he overplay his hand and lapse into mugging.) The actor was also accomplished at straight drama, as evidenced in Only Angels Have Wings (1939), Destination Tokyo (1942), Crisis (1950), and in his favorite role as an irresponsible cockney in None but the Lonely Heart (1942), for which Grant was nominated for an Oscar -- he didn't win, although he was awarded a special Oscar for career achievement in 1970. Off-stage, most of Grant's co-workers had nothing but praise for his craftsmanship and willingness to work with co-stars rather than at them. Among Grant's yea-sayers was director Alfred Hitchcock, who cast the actor in three of his best films, most notably the quintessential Hitchcock thriller North by Northwest (1959). Seemingly growing handsomer and more charming as he got older, Grant retained his stardom into the 1960s, enriching himself with lucrative percentage-of-profits deals on such box-office hits as Operation Petticoat (1959) and Charade (1964). Upon completing Walk, Don't Run in 1966, Grant decided he was through with filmmaking -- and he meant it. Devoting his remaining years to an executive position at a major cosmetics firm, Grant never appeared on a TV talk show and seldom granted newspaper interviews. In the 1980s, however, he became restless, and decided to embark on a nationwide lecture tour, confining himself exclusively to small towns in which the residents might otherwise never have the chance to see a Hollywood superstar in person. It was while preparing to lecture in Davenport, IA, that the 82-year-old Cary Grant suffered a sudden and fatal stroke in 1986.
Brian Aherne (Actor) .. Michael Fane
Born: May 02, 1902
Died: February 10, 1986
Trivia: Active in amateur theatricals from age three, Briton Brian Aherne studied for his craft at the Italia Conti School, making his professional bow when he was eight. Aherne would later claim that he remained an actor into adulthood (after a tentative stab at becoming an architect) mainly because he liked to sleep until ten in the morning. Successful on stage and screen in England, Aherne came to America in 1931 to appear in the first Broadway production of The Barretts of Wimpole Street. His first Hollywood film was 1933's Song of Songs, in which he appeared with Marlene Dietrich. Free-lancing throughout the 1930s, Aherne established himself as a gentlemanly Britisher who was willing to defend his honor (or someone else's) with his fists if needs be. Many of his roles were secondary, though he played the title role in 1937's The Great Garrick and was starred in a brace of Hal Roach productions in 1938 and 1939 (the actor wasn't crazy about the improvisational attitude at Roach, but he enjoyed the roles). He was Oscar-nominated for his sensitive performance of the doomed Emperor Maximillian in Juarez (1939). In the late 1950s, he put film and TV work aside for a theatrical tour as Henry Higgins in My Fair Lady. Off-camera, Aherne was a licensed pilot and an aspiring writer: he penned a 1969 autobiography, A Proper Job, as well as a biography of his close friend George Sanders, A Dreadful Man. At one point in his life, Aherne was married to Joan Fontaine, but he knew the honeymoon was over when, out of pique, she ripped up a collection of his best reviews. Brian Aherne was the brother of Patrick Ahearne, a character player who showed up in such films as Titanic (1953), The Court Jester (1955) and Around the World in Eighty Days (1956).
Edmund Gwenn (Actor) .. Henry Scarlett
Born: September 26, 1877
Died: September 06, 1959
Birthplace: Wandsworth, London, United Kingdom
Trivia: The son of a traveling British civil servant, Edmund Gwenn was ordered to leave his home at age 17 when he announced his intention to become an actor. Working throughout the British empire in a variety of theatrical troupes, Gwenn finally settled in London in 1902 when he was personally selected by playwright George Bernard Shaw for a role in Shaw's Man and Superman. Thanks to Shaw's sponsorship, Gwenn rapidly established himself as one of London's foremost character stars, his career interrupted only by military service during World War I. Gwenn's film career, officially launched in 1916, took a back seat to his theatrical work for most of his life; still, he was a favorite of both American and British audiences for his portrayals of blustery old men, both comic and villainous. At age 71, Gwenn was cast as Kris Kringle, a lovable old eccentric who imagined that he was Santa Claus, in the comedy classic Miracle on 34th Street (1947); his brilliant portrayal was honored with an Academy Award and transformed the veteran actor into an "overnight" movie star. Edmund Gwenn died shortly after making his final film, an oddball Mexican comedy titled The Rocket From Calabuch (1958); one of his surviving family members his cousin Cecil Kellaway, was a respected character actor in his own right.
Natalie Paley (Actor) .. Lily
Dennis Moore (Actor) .. Maudie Tilt
Born: January 26, 1908
Died: March 01, 1964
Trivia: American actor Dennis Moore made his first stage appearance with a Texas stock company in 1932. If his official bio is to be believed, Moore was 18 at the time, casting some doubt over his claim of having been a commercial pilot before inaugurating his acting career. Whatever the case, it is a matter of record that Moore entered films in 1936 when he was discovered by a Columbia Pictures talent scout. Two years later, he made the first of his many Westerns at Republic Pictures. In his earliest sagebrush appearances, he was a bit player, stunt man, or villain; in 1940, he attained his first cowboy leading role in The Man From Tascosa, though he would continue to take bad-guy parts (notably as a serial killer in the East Side Kids' 1941 feature Spooks Run Wild) even after his good-guy debut. In 1943, Moore joined Ray "Crash" Corrigan and Max Terhune as a member of the Range Busters in the Monogram Western series of the same name. Until his retirement from films in 1957, Moore alternated between Westerns and such serials as The Purple Monster Strikes (1945). Dennis Moore owns the distinction of starring in the last serial ever made by Republic, King of the Carnival (1956), and the last serial ever made in Hollywood, Columbia's Blazing the Overland Trail (1956).
Lennox Pawle (Actor) .. Drunk
Born: January 01, 1871
Died: January 01, 1936
Daisy Belmore (Actor) .. Bit
Born: January 01, 1873
Died: January 01, 1954
Nola Luxford (Actor) .. Bit
Born: January 01, 1895
Died: October 10, 1994
Trivia: Nola Luxford went from having an unremarkable career as a actress of the 1920s and 1930s to becoming a pioneer in the field of radio journalism. A native of New Zealand, she launched her film career at Hollywood's Universal Studios in the 1920s. She appeared in a variety of films, ranging from Girl Shy (1924) and Ben Hur (1926) to King of the Herd (1927) and Kind Lady (1935). She began her radio career in 1932, when she convinced L.A. station KFI to let her broadcast sports news reports about the Olympic games. The actress loved the work and, in 1936, joined NBC's Four Star News in New York. She was the first and only female radio announcer of her time and her success opened doors for other women wanting to become broadcasters. During WWII, she spent much of her time on shortwave radio sending special messages from soldiers to friends and family in New Zealand. She also founded the ANZAC club (the acronym stands for the Australia-New Zealand Army Corps), a place where servicemen from Down Under could be entertained while stationed in New York. Her efforts earned her the fond nickname of Miss Anzac of the U.S.A. In 1947, she received the Order of the British Empire from King George VI and the U.S. Award of Merit from President Truman. During the 1950s, Luxford worked as the fashion director at the New York Pierre Hotel and, later in life, published several children's books in New Zealand. In 1989, Queen Elizabeth II bestowed the Queen's Service Order upon her.
Daisy Goodill (Actor) .. Bit
Elsa Buchanan (Actor) .. Bit
Born: December 22, 1908
Lilyan Irene (Actor) .. Bit
Born: March 18, 1892
Died: December 30, 1979
Trivia: Best remembered as the abused nursemaid in perhaps Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy's best short comedy, the award-winning The Music Box (1932), this British-born singer played more parlor, nurse, and bar maids than anybody else in Hollywood films of the 1930s and 1940s. Occasionally, moviegoers got to enjoy Irene's voice as well, memorably in Betty Grable's Sweet Rosie O'Grady where, as Grace, she sings "Battle Cry."
Kay Deslys (Actor) .. Bit
Born: September 28, 1899
Died: August 15, 1974
Trivia: Her dignity usually in shambles by the end of the first reel, imposing-looking comedienne Kay Deslys hailed from a family of music hall entertainers. Reportedly on stage from the age of five, Deslys -- who presumably took her professional moniker in honor of musical comedy star Gaby Deslys (her real name was Kathleen Herbert) -- later appeared in vaudeville in both Canada and the U.S., and was for a time a member of the Gus Edwards troupe. She entered pictures in 1923 and later earned her modicum of fame as a foil for the team of Laurel & Hardy in such two-reelers as We Faw Down ([1928] as one of the floozies) and Should Married Men Go Home? ([1928] as Hardy's wife). Married to actor/theater owner Jack Baxley (1884-1950), Deslys appeared in literally hundreds of bit parts until her retirement in 1952. She later worked as a saleswoman at Mandel's, a Los Angeles shoe retailer.
May Beatty (Actor) .. Bit
Born: June 04, 1880
Died: April 01, 1945
Trivia: One of Hollywood's great dowagers, long under contract to MGM, May Beatty, from New Zealand, rarely had more than a few moments to make her presence felt. But felt it was, from a silent bit in Dinner at Eight (1933) to the inquisitive Lady Handel in the thriller I Wake Up Screaming (1941).
Thomas Braidon (Actor) .. Bit
Born: January 01, 1869
Died: January 01, 1950
Elspeth Dudgeon (Actor) .. Bit
Born: January 01, 1870
Died: January 01, 1955
Ella McKenzie (Actor) .. Bit
Born: January 01, 1979
Died: January 01, 1987
Roger Roughton (Actor) .. Bit
Ethel Rawson (Actor) .. Bit
Alec Harford (Actor) .. Bit
Born: January 01, 1888
Died: January 01, 1955
Frank Moran (Actor) .. Bit
Born: March 18, 1887
Died: December 14, 1967
Trivia: Gravel-voiced, granite-faced former heavyweight boxer Frank C. Moran made his film debut as a convict in Mae West's She Done Him Wrong (1933). Though quickly typecast as a thick-eared brute, Moran was in real life a gentle soul, fond of poetry and fine art. Perhaps it was this aspect of his personality that attracted Moran to eccentric producer/director/writer Preston Sturges, who cast the big lug in all of his productions of the 1940s. It was Moran who, as a cop in Sturges' Christmas in July (1940), halted a tirade by an argumentative Jewish storeowner by barking, "Who do ya think you are, Hitler?" And it was Moran who, as a tough truck driver in Sullivan's Travels (1942), patiently explains to his traveling companions the meaning of the word "paraphrase." On a less lofty level, Frank Moran shared the title role with George Zucco in Monogram's Return of the Ape Man (1944).
Colin Campbell (Actor) .. Bit
Born: March 20, 1883
Died: March 25, 1966
Trivia: Of the many movie-industryites bearing the name "Colin Campbell," the best known was the Scots-born silent film director listed below. Emigrating to the U.S. at the turn of the century, Campbell barnstormed as a stage actor and director before settling at the Selig studios in 1911. The best-remembered of his Selig directorial efforts was 1914's The Spoilers, a crude but ruggedly realistic Alaskan adventure film climaxed by a brutal fistfight. It was during his Selig years that Campbell helped to nurture the talents of future western star Tom Mix. Considered an "old-timer" and has-been by the early 1920s, Colin Campbell ended his career with such plodding time-fillers as Pagan Passions (1924) and The Bowery Bishop (1924).
Connie Lamont (Actor) .. Bit
Lorimer Johnston (Actor) .. Bit
Born: January 01, 1859
Died: January 01, 1941
Gwendolyn Logan (Actor) .. Bit
Born: December 30, 1881
C. Montague Shaw (Actor) .. Bit
Born: January 01, 1882
Died: January 01, 1968
Trivia: Hailing from Australia despite his distinctive, clipped British accent, C. Montagu Shaw (the initial stood for "Charles") appeared in countless Hollywood pictures from 1926-1953, almost always cast as distinguished types. In his later years, Shaw made serials his specialty, appearing as the Clay King in Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars (1938), Dr. Malcolm in Daredevils of the Red Circle (1939), Professor Scott, the heroine's father, in The Mysterious Doctor Satan (1940), Dr. Huer in Buck Rogers (1940), and Dr. Nicholson in G-Men vs. the Black Dragon (1943). Shaw's most notable contribution to the genre, however, came in Zorro's Fighting Legion (1939) as Pablo, the dignified council member who turns out to be the nefarious Don del Oro, a megalomaniac hiding behind a hideous mask. Shaw retired in the early 1950s and died at the Motion Picture Country House and Hospital in Woodland Hills, CA.
Elsie Mackay (Actor) .. Bit
Patricia Caron (Actor) .. Bit
Robert Hale (Actor) .. Bit
Born: January 01, 1873
Died: April 18, 1940
Nina Borget (Actor) .. Bit
Carmen Beretta (Actor) .. Bit
Harrington Reynolds (Actor) .. Bit
Violet Seaton (Actor) .. Bit
Pat Somerset (Actor) .. Bit
Born: February 28, 1897
Died: April 20, 1974
Trivia: Not to be confused with the present-day film editor of the same name, British actor Pat Somerset had been in the military before making his film bow in the Eve two-reel comedy series of 1918. With his performance in 1928's Hangman's House, Somerset became a "regular" in the non-Western films of director John Ford. His army experience served him well when he was called upon to play British-India officers in such films as Bonnie Scotland (1935) and Wee Willie Winkie (1937). Active in films until 1937, Pat Somerset was one of the charter members (and charter officers) of the Screen Actors Guild.
George Nardelli (Actor) .. Frenchman
Born: January 01, 1895
Died: January 01, 1973
Dina Smirnova (Actor) .. Russian
Born: January 01, 1889
Died: January 01, 1947
E.E. Clive (Actor) .. Customs Inspector
Born: August 28, 1879
Died: June 06, 1940
Trivia: Born in Wales, E. E. Clive studied for a medical career before switching his field of endeavor to acting at age 22. Touring the provinces for a decade, Clive became an expert at virtually every sort of regional dialect in the British Isles. He moved to the U.S. in 1912, where after working in the Orpheum vaudeville circuit he set up his own stock company in Boston. By the 1920s, his company was operating in Hollywood; among his repertory players were such up-and-comers as Rosalind Russell. He made his film debut as a rural police officer in 1933's The Invisible Man, then spent the next seven years showing up in wry bit roles as burgomeisters, butlers, reporters, aristocrats, shopkeepers and cabbies. Though he seldom settled down too long in any one characterization, E. E. Clive was a semi-regular as Tenny the Butler in Paramount's Bulldog Drummond "B" series.
Edward Cooper (Actor) .. Customs Inspector
Born: January 01, 1882
Died: January 01, 1956
Olaf Hytten (Actor) .. Customs Inspector
Born: January 01, 1888
Died: March 21, 1955
Trivia: Piping-voice, hamster-faced Scottish character actor Olaf Hytten left the British stage for films in 1921. By the time the talkie era rolled around, Hytten was firmly established in Hollywood, playing an abundance of butlers and high-society gentlemen. The actor was primarily confined to one or two-line bits in such films as Platinum Blonde (1931), The Sphinx (1933), Bonnie Scotland (1935), Beloved Rebel (1936), The Howards of Virginia (1940) and The Bride Came COD (1941). He was a semi-regular of the Universal B-unit in the '40s, appearing in substantial roles as military men and police official in the Rathbone/Bruce Sherlock Holmes series and as burgomeisters and innkeepers in the studio's many horror films (Ghost of Frankenstein, House of Frankenstein, etc.) Olaf Hytten was active until at least 1956; one of his more memorable assignments of the '50s was as the larcenous butler who participates in a scheme to drive Daily Planet editor Perry White crazy in the "Great Caesar's Ghost" episode of the TV series Adventures of Superman.
Bunny Beatty (Actor) .. Maid
Born: October 23, 1913
Peter Hobbes (Actor) .. Steward
Jacques Vanaire (Actor) .. Steward
Leonard Mudie (Actor) .. Steward
Born: April 11, 1884
Died: April 14, 1965
Trivia: Gaunt, rich-voiced British actor Leonard Mudie made his stage bow in 1908 with the Gaiety Theater in Manchester. Mudie first appeared on the New York stage in 1914, then spent the next two decades touring in various British repertory companies. In 1932, he settled in Hollywood, where he remained until his death 33 years later. His larger screen roles included Dr. Pearson in The Mummy (1932), Porthinos in Cleopatra (1934), Maitland in Mary of Scotland (1936), and De Bourenne in Anthony Adverse (1936). He also essayed dozen of unbilled bits, usually cast as a bewigged, gimlet-eyed British judge. One of his more amusing uncredited roles was as "old school" actor Horace Carlos in the 1945 Charlie Chan entry The Scarlet Clue, wherein he explained his entree into the new medium of television with a weary, "Well, it's a living!" Active well into the TV era, Leonard Mudie showed up memorably in a handful of Superman video episodes and was a semi-regular as Cmdr. Barnes in the Bomba B-picture series.
Adrienne D'Ambricourt (Actor) .. Stewardess
Born: January 01, 1887
Died: January 01, 1957
Gaston Glass (Actor) .. Purser
Born: December 31, 1895
Died: November 11, 1965
Trivia: A handsome matinee idol from France, with a pronounced widow's peak, Gaston Glass often starred in Northwest melodramas the likes of Cameron of the Royal Mounted (1922) and Call of the Klondike (1926), but also appeared in more mainstream Western fare such as Untamed Justice (1929). A victim of talkies, Glass left acting to become a production manager for Poverty Row's only woman producer, Fanchon Royer, and later functioned as an assistant director at 20th Century Fox. He was married to Hollywood chorus girl Bo Peep Karlin.
Michael Visaroff (Actor) .. Purser
Born: November 18, 1892
Died: February 27, 1951
Trivia: Burly Russian actor Michael Visaroff launched his film career in 1925. Like many of his fellow Russian expatriates, Visaroff claimed to be of noble lineage, which enabled him to land such roles as Count Bosrinov in Disraeli (1929). From the early '30s until his death, he was usually cast as innkeepers, most memorably in Universal's first two Dracula films and in Laurel and Hardy's The Flying Deuces (1939). Michael Visaroff's funniest film appearance was as the homicidal maniac ("She's the first wife I ever killed!") who shares a jail cell with W.C. Fields in Man on the Flying Trapeze (1935).
Harold Entwistle (Actor) .. Conductor
Born: September 15, 1865
Died: April 01, 1944
Trivia: A dignified-looking character actor from England, Harold Entwistle directed an early version of the popular Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch (1914) starring Beatriz Michelena. A character actor thereafter, Entwistle often played kind characters -- ministers, doctors, butlers, and the like. Today, however, he is perhaps best remembered as the real-life uncle of ill-fated starlet Peg Entwistle who, while residing with him in Hollywood's Beachwood Canyon, jumped to her death from the letter "H" in the nearby "Hollywoodland" sign.
Lionel Pape (Actor) .. Sgt. Major
Born: April 17, 1877
Died: October 21, 1944
Trivia: The very picture of an English gentleman officer, monocle and all, Lionel Pape came to Hollywood in 1935 after a distinguished career on stage and screen in his home country. Usually seen as a member of the horsy set, Pape played Major Allardyce in Shirley Temple's Wee Willie Winkie (1937), Lord Harry Droopy in The Big Broadcast of 1938, Lord Melrose in Raffles (1940), and Babberly in Charlie's Aunt (1941). Pape died at the then newly founded Motion Picture Country House and Hospital.
Robert Adair (Actor) .. Turnkey
Born: January 03, 1900
Died: August 10, 1954
Trivia: Despite hailing from San Francisco, dark-haired Robert A'Dair (sometimes given as Robert Adair) spent his screen career playing English military personnel, bobbies, butlers, footmen, and so on. A'Dair played the cockroach racing Captain Hardy in the 1930 Hollywood screen version of the anti-war play Journey's End (1930), the highlight of a long screen career spent mostly in small supporting roles.
Harold Cheevers (Actor) .. Bobby
Dennie Moore (Actor) .. Maudie Tilt
Born: December 31, 1907

Before / After
-

Smart Woman
10:00 am