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citizenscreen · 1 month
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James Cagney, Pat O’Brien, Spencer Tracy, and Frank McHugh At The Racetrack 1947.
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letterboxd-loggd · 19 days
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The Dark Horse (1932) Alfred E. Green
April 7th 2024
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blondecrazydame · 1 year
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Here Comes the Navy (1934)
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gatutor · 10 months
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Frank McHugh-Jane Wyman "He couldn´t say no" 1938, de Lewis Seiler.
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kwebtv · 3 months
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Heaven Can Wait - CBS - November 16, 1960
A presentation of DuPont Show of the Month Season 4 Episode 3
Comedy / Drama
Running Time: 90 minutes
Stars:
Anthony Franciosa as Joe Pendleton
Joey Bishop as Max Levine
Wally Cox as Messenger 7013
Frank McHugh as Lefty
Diana Van der Vlis as Julia Farnsworth
Robert Morley as Mr. Jordan
Paul Stevens as Tony Abbott
Paul Reed as Inspector
Patrick Waddington as Butler
Elizabeth Ashley as Bette
Bud Palmer as Announcer
Martin Ashe as First Escort
Jean Sincere as Suzie
Farrell Pelly as Doctor
Henry Wallitsch as Smallings
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oldshowbiz · 1 year
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The Lido Apartments: Oddly Shaped and Always Sketchy.
Located at 6500 Yucca Ave, it was home to Warner Brothers contract player Frank McHugh. 
In the 1970s, it appeared in the TV show Police Story, the Charlton Heston movie Earthquake, and the Elliott Gould movie Busting.
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flynnfan-downunder · 2 years
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Errol Flynn holds the key to Dodge City, as presented to Warner Bros. Also seen are (standing left to right) Maxie Rosenbloom. Lya Lys, Mayo Methot, Claire Windsor, Frank McHugh, Rosemary Lane, Priscilla Lane, and Jean Parker. Crouching are Humphrey Bogart and a snapshot-taking John Garfield. 1939.
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James Cagney, Frank McHugh as Spud Connors and Eric Linden in The Crowd Roars (1932). Frank was born in Homestead, Pennsylvania, and had 173 acting credits from a 1929 short to a 1969 tv episode. This is Frank’s second film with Howard Hawks, after The Dawn Patrol (1930).
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citizenscreen · 1 year
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Hollywood columnist Sidney Skolsky dubbed them the "Irish Mafia,” core members: James Cagney, Frank McHugh, Pat O'Brien, and Spencer Tracy.
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letterboxd-loggd · 9 months
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The Hoodlum Saint (1946) Norman Taurog
July 29th 2023
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thursdaymurderbub · 1 month
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gatutor · 1 year
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Carol Hughes-Frank McHugh "Three men on a horse" 1936, de Mervyn LeRoy.
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Fashions of 1934
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It's a great pity that the only time William Powell and Bette Davis appeared on screen together she was saddled with an inconsistent nothing of a role any ingenue could have played. William Dieterle’s FASHIONS OF 1934 (1934, TCM, YouTube) — aka FASHION FOLLIES OF 1934, aka FOLLIES AND FASHIONS OF 1934, aka FASHIONS — isn’t about to make you forget Powell’s work with Kay Francis. Nor will it make you regret his move to MGM, where he eventually teamed with Myrna Loy. But at least it moves quickly (until they have to wrap up the plot) and has some snappy dialog along with a delirious Busby Berkeley dance routine that tries to do for ostrich feathers what “The Shadow Waltz” did for violins and “I Only Have Eyes for You” did for Ruby Keeler’s face (in the latter case, the ostrich feathers are a big improvement). Powell is a con man who turns Davis’ skills as an illustrator into a business pirating Paris fashions, first in New York and then in the City of Light. Along the way he runs into former flame Verree Teasdale, a Hoboken con woman passing herself off as a Russian duchess. Davis hated being transformed into a fashion icon, and it must have galled her to see Teesdale given the most interesting role. Still, the Depression Duse’s not horrible, and there are a few glances and line readings that indicate her power as an actress and even suggest she could have been a match for Powell at sophisticated comedy. He’s reliably polished and offers some deft physical bits, particularly when creditors pull his office furniture out from under him. Ultimately, however, the film is a showcase for Orry Kelly, who not only transforms Davis but also gets to design a series of dazzling fashion shows. The cast includes Frank McHugh as Powell’s randy assistant (this is a pre-Code film, so his antics get pretty randy, indeed), Hugh Herbert as an ostrich farmer, Reginald Owen as a Paris couturier who may be using Teesdale as a beard, Dorothy Burgess as Powell’s greedy ex-, Arthur Treacher in his first butler role and Davis’ dog, Tibby, as Davis’ dog, Tibby.
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perfettamentechic · 8 months
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11 settembre … ricordiamo …
11 settembre … ricordiamo … #semprevivineiricordi #nomidaricordare #personaggiimportanti #perfettamentechic
2021: Carlo Alighiero, nome d’arte di Carlo Animali, attore, doppiatore e regista teatrale italiano. Fece parte della Compagnia Vittorio Gassmann. Sposato con l’attrice Elena Cotta. (n.1927) 2017: Peter Hall, Sir Peter Reginald Frederick Hall, attore e regista inglese. Sposato quattro volte con: l’attrice francese Leslie Caron;  Jacqueline Taylor; il soprano lirico Maria Ewing; e con Nikki Frei.…
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