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Susannah of the Mounties is a 1939 American Western film directed by William A. Seiter and starring Shirley Temple, Randolph Scott, and Margaret Lockwood. [1] Based on the 1936 novel Susannah of the Mounties by Muriel Denison, the film is about an orphaned survivor of an Indian attack in the Canadian West who is taken in by a Mountie and his girlfriend.
Susannah of the Mounties: Susannah "Sue" Sheldon [46] The Blue Bird: 1940 Mytyl [47] Young People: Wendy Ballantine Dance partners: Charlotte Greenwood and Jack Oakie [48] Kathleen: 1941 Kathleen Davis [49] Miss Annie Rooney: 1942 Annie Rooney [50] Since You Went Away: 1944 Bridget "Brig" Hilton [51] I'll Be Seeing You: Barbara Marshall [52 ...
Susannah of the Mounties is a children's novel by Canadian author Muriel Denison, first published in 1936. [1] In the book 9-year-old Susannah is sent to Regina, Saskatchewan to spend the summer with her uncle who is a Mountie. There are several sequels to the book: Susannah at Boarding School, Susannah of the Yukon and Susannah Rides Again.
Richard Davis Thunderbird (August 6, 1866 – April 6, 1946) was a Native American actor of Cheyenne descent known as Chief Thunderbird.He appeared in twenty films but was credited only in major films such as Wild West Days (1937), For the Service (1936), Silly Billies (1936), Custer's Last Stand (1936), Annie Oakley (1935), Cyclone of the Saddle (1935), Laughing Boy (1934), and Heroes of the ...
Shirley Temple as Sylvia Dolores "Dimples" Appleby, an 8-year-old girl who is a street performer in New York City circa 1850 and Professor Appleby's granddaughter; Frank Morgan as Professor Eustace Appleby, a pickpocket who is also Dimples's grandfather
The Case Against Mrs. Ames is a 1936 American mystery drama film written by C. Graham Baker and Gene Towne based on a serial of the same name by Arthur Somers Roche originally published in Collier's Weekly magazine in 1934, and then as a novel in 1936. [2]
Stowaway is a 1936 American musical drama film directed by William A. Seiter.The screenplay by William M. Conselman, Nat Perrin, and Arthur Sheekman is based on a story by Samuel G. Engel.
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