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The Roaring Twenties (1939) with McHugh, James Cagney and Humphrey Bogart Red Skelton, Carol Sydes and McHugh on The Red Skelton Show, 1959. Francis Curry McHugh (May 23, 1898 – September 11, 1981) [1] was an American stage, radio, film and television actor.
Lambert T. Hunkins (Frank McHugh) works at a linoleum company. When his boss, Oxnard O. Parsons (Ferris Taylor), gives him a raise from $30 a month to $40, his girlfriend Violet's (Jane Wyman) mother, Mrs. Coney (Cora Witherspoon), decides that it is time for the two to get married.
Mystery of the Wax Museum is a 1933 American pre-Code mystery-horror film directed by Michael Curtiz and starring Lionel Atwill, Fay Wray, Glenda Farrell, and Frank McHugh.It was produced and released by Warner Bros. and filmed in two-color Technicolor; Doctor X and Mystery of the Wax Museum were the last two dramatic fiction films made using this process.
The film stars Robert Cummings, Lizabeth Scott, Diana Lynn, Eve Arden, Ray Collins and Frank McHugh. The film was released on February 15, 1950 by Paramount Pictures . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ]
Manpower is a 1941 American crime melodrama directed by Raoul Walsh and starring Edward G. Robinson, Marlene Dietrich, and George Raft.The picture was written by Richard Macaulay and Jerry Wald, and the supporting cast features Alan Hale, Frank McHugh, Eve Arden, Barton MacLane, Ward Bond and Walter Catlett.
It Happens Every Thursday is a 1953 American comedy film directed by Joseph Pevney and starring Loretta Young, John Forsythe, and Frank McHugh, loosely based on the 1951 autobiographical book of the same title by Jane S. McIlvaine. It was Loretta Young's final theater-released film, as she switched to television work after this movie.
A strange and strangely magical film from the very uneven filmmaker Tay Garnett, One Way Passage is a movie that once seen is unlikely to be forgotten... the film's brilliant balance of cynical comedy (provided by Frank McHugh and the wonderful Aline MacMahon) and tragic – ultimately mystical – romance." [10]
Frank McHugh as Erwin Trowbridge; Joan Blondell as Mabel, Patsy's ditsy girlfriend; Guy Kibbee as J.G. Carver; Carol Hughes as Audrey Trowbridge; Allen Jenkins as Charlie; Sam Levene as Patsy. Levene performed same role in original 1935 Broadway production. Teddy Hart as Frankie; Edgar Kennedy as Harry the bartender; Paul Harvey as Clarence Dobbins