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The Cobra Strikes is a 1948 American mystery film directed by Charles Reisner and starring Sheila Ryan, Richard Fraser, and Leslie Brooks. [1] In the UK, it was released as Crime Without Clues . Plot
1948 The Man from Texas: Horseman (uncredited) 1948 The Noose Hangs High: Shatterproof Glass Seller (uncredited) 1948 The Cobra Strikes: Police Sgt. Harris 1948 The Street with No Name: Officer (uncredited) 1948 Hollow Triumph: Ship's Official at Dock (uncredited) 1948 Night Has a Thousand Eyes: Policeman (uncredited) 1948 Bungalow 13: Willie 1948
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:1948 films. It includes 1948 films that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. This category is for mystery films released in the year 1948 .
Title Director Cast Genre Notes 13 Lead Soldiers: Frank McDonald: Tom Conway, Maria Palmer, Helen Westcott: Mystery 20th Century Fox: 3 Godfathers: John Ford: John Wayne, Harry Carey Jr., Pedro Armendáriz, Mae Marsh
As Leslie Brooks, she began appearing in movie bit roles for Columbia in 1941. Brooks started landing more sizable parts in such movies as Nine Girls (1944), Cover Girl (1944), and the lead in the film noir classic Blonde Ice (1948). She retired from films in 1949, but returned to make one last film in 1971.
In late 1939, Everett M. "Busy" Arnold, publisher of the Quality Comics comic-book line, began exploring an expansion into newspaper Sunday supplements, aware that many newspapers felt they had to compete with the suddenly burgeoning new medium of American comic books, as exemplified by the Chicago Tribune Comic Book, premiering two months before "The Spirit Section". [3]
After a year at the Pasadena Playhouse, Seay spent the summer as leading man in a summer stock company at the Chapel Playhouse in Guilford, Connecticut.He returned to Pasadena and performed in two plays before he received a contract from Paramount He played a doctor in an "old folks home" in the film Miracle on 34th Street (1947).
Ernest Milton Parsons [1] (May 19, 1904 – May 15, 1980) was an American character actor. [2] In 1927, Parsons performed with The Strolling Players of Boston acting company. [3] On Broadway, he portrayed James Case in Unto the Third (1933), Saul of Tarsus in The Vigil (1948), and Albert Plaschke in Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep (1950). [4]