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In 2012, the Virginia Weidler Remembrance Society was created to honor her life and career. [18] In late 2016, the Los Angeles City Council honored Weidler by proclaiming March 21, 2017, which would have been her 90th birthday, as A Celebration of Virginia Weidler. [19]
Laddie (1926): directed by James Leo Meehan and produced by Gene Stratton Porter Productions, featuring John Bowers, Bess Flowers, and Gene Stratton [4] Laddie (1940): directed by Jack Hively and produced by RKO Radio Picture Productions, featuring Tim Holt, Virginia Gilmore, and Joan Caroll.
Jessie Arnold (December 3, 1884 – May 5, 1955) was an American character and film actress [1] [2] who appeared in more than 150 films from silent shorts to the early 1950s. [3]
Dan Sparling is a convicted embezzler who becomes editor of his prison newspaper. After serving out his sentence, he sets up an independent newspaper devoted to attacking corruption in public life, encountering various difficulties due to his being an ex-con and opposition from the incumbent administration.
The Youngest Profession is a 1943 film directed by Edward Buzzell, and starring Virginia Weidler, Edward Arnold, John Carroll, Scotty Beckett, and Agnes Moorehead.Based on a short story series and book written by Lillian Day, it contains cameos by Greer Garson, Lana Turner, William Powell, Walter Pidgeon, and Robert Taylor.
Virginia Weidler and Terry, who also played "Toto" in The Wizard of Oz that year (1939) . Bad Little Angel is a 1939 inspirational drama film starring Virginia Weidler as an orphan named Patsy Sanderson, living in America around 1900.
The coronavirus pandemic has forced Virginia Beach officials to change their plans for remembering the victims of last year’s mass shooting in the town. An in-person ceremony and other ...
The Great Man Votes is a 1939 American drama film starring John Barrymore as a widowed professor turned drunkard who has the deciding vote in an election for mayor. It was based on the short story of the same name by Gordon Malherbe Hillman published in the November 1933 issue of American Magazine. [2]