Skip to main content

Love Happy (1949)



 Love Happy (1949) - Marylin Monroe appeared in a small role as Grunion's Client

Young hopefuls trying to stage a Broadway show on a shoestring are sustained with food by expert shoplifter Harpo. They little suspect that his donations include the special sardine can hiding the Romanoff diamonds! Slinky Madame Egelichi and her henchmen will do anything to get them back, but the Marx Brothers lead them a merry chase.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Some Like It Hot (4K UHD)

  Some Like It Hot (4K UHD) Price $21.92 Link to order: https://amzn.to/3tRjuuW Marilyn Monroe, George Raft, Mike Mazurki, Joe E. Brown, Tony Curtis, Joan Shawlee, Jack Lemmon, Pat O'Brien, Nehemiah Persoff, Billy Wilder From the brilliant minds of director Billy Wilder (One, Two, Three) and screenwriter I.A.L. Diamond (The Apartment) comes the quintessential madcap farce, starring the marvelous Marilyn Monroe (The Seven Year Itch) and her bosom companions Tony Curtis (Captain Newman, M.D.) and Jack Lemmon (The Fortune Cookie). When Chicago musicians Joe and Jerry accidentally witness a gangland shooting, they quickly board a southbound train to Florida, disguised as Josephine and Daphne, the two newest—and homeliest—members of an all-female jazz band. Their cover is perfect…until a lovelorn singer falls for Josephine, an ancient playboy falls for Daphne, and a mob boss refuses to fall for their hoax! Well, nobody’s perfect…except for the cast: Marilyn dazzles as Sugar “Kane” Kowal...

Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay! (1948)

Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay! (1948) (uncredited) .... Girl in Canoe (lake scenes)/Girl Exiting Church This is a 1948 comedy film which is generally considered to be Marilyn Monroe's "film debut" (although most of her footage was cut and she only has a brief one-line scene). The film tells the story of a farm hand who tries to tame his employer's mules and woo his employer's daughter at the same time. The film stars June Haver, Lon McCallister, Walter Brennan, Anne Revere and Natalie Wood. The film was adapted by F. Hugh Herbert from the novel of the same name by George Agnew Chamberlain. It was directed by Herbert.