Money and the Woman
An embezzler's wife begs his boss for forgiveness, only to fall in love with him.
William K. Howard
Casts & Crew
Jeffrey Lynn
Brenda Marshall
John Litel
Lee Patrick
Henry O'Neill
Roger Pryor
Guinn Williams
Henry Kolker
William Gould
Edward Keane
William Marshall
Peter Ashley
Mildred Coles
Sandra Stephenson
Willie Best
Eddie Acuff
David Bruce
Lucia Carroll
Eddy Chandler
Georgie Cooper
Lucile Fairbanks
Frank Fanning
Betty Farrington
Galan Galt
Inez Gay
Creighton Hale
Phyllis Hamilton
Margaret Hayes
George Haywood
Max Hoffman Jr.
Stuart Holmes
William Hopper
Vera Lewis
Jean Maddox
Edward McWade
Howard M. Mitchell
Paul Panzer
Sally Payne
Susan Peters
Robert Prins
John Ridgely
Cliff Saum
Larry Steers
Lottie Williams
Tom Wilson
Jack Wise
Also Directed by William K. Howard
A romance between a struggling composer and an American singer.
Anna Moore, a poor orphaned country girl, and her little brother, Tommy, live with hypocritical Squire Simpson, who conspires with his son to acquire the inheritance due the girl.
London's jewel thieves are under the thumb of a mysterious fence, who ruthlessly exposes any thief who crosses him. Desperate, Scotland Yard re-hires ex-Inspector Barrabal who, as a known drunkard, is ideally suited to go undercover with a faked criminal record (which may spoil his chances with lovely Carol Stedman).
Film which tells the story of immigrants coming to the United States.
First one stranger, then another, arrive at the presidio, each with a government pass and each claiming to have been robbed by the notorious Captain Fly-by-Night and his highwaymen. The soldiers and Señorita Anita believe the first to be Fly-by-Night and the second to be Señor Rocha, Anita's fiancée and emissary of the governor. But the first stranger, to whom Anita is drawn, proves to be on a government mission and exposes the second stranger as Captain Fly-by-Night.
Christina is a lost 1929 part-talking film starring Janet Gaynor and directed by William K. Howard.
Grace Livingston is leading a happy life in her small town, with her mother and father, being courted by two men, the steady but predictable Tommy Tucker and the more ambitious, flashy, and worldly Dick Loring, who seems closer to Grace in his desire for travel and adventure.
Lionel Barrymore stars in this 1934 comedy-drama about a man contending with personal and family problems.
Any movie that starts Jewish entertainer George Jessel as an Italian accordionist named Luigi can't be all bad. In love with the beautiful Margharita (Lila Lee), Luigi lands a job in the music store owned by the girl's uncle. Ultimately, however, our hero does the Pagliacci act when Margharita evinces a preference for handsome Pasquale (David Rollins). The film's best scene takes place in a nursery full of talented tots, a sequence that undoubtedly reminded Jessel of his days with Gus Edwards' "Schoolroom" act. Exercising his droit du seigneur, Georgie Jessel sings the title tune.