Streamline Express
Streamline Express | |
---|---|
Directed by | Leonard Fields |
Produced by |
Nat Levine (producer) George Yohalem (supervising producer) |
Written by |
Wellyn Totman (story) Leonard Fields (screenplay) & David Silverstein (screenplay) & Olive Cooper (screenplay) |
Starring | See below |
Cinematography |
Jack A. Marta Ernest Miller |
Edited by | Joseph H. Lewis |
Release dates | 15 September 1935 |
Running time | 71 minutes |
Country | USA |
Language | English |
Streamline Express is a 1935 American film directed by Leonard Fields.
Plot summary
Broadway star Patricia Wallis (Evelyn Venable), after a quarrel, leaves the new show produced by Jimmy Hart (Victor Jory) and, not realizing that Hart is in love with her, she runs off to California with the wealthy, stodgy Freddy Arnold (Theodore von Eltz) with the announced intention of getting married. Jimmy discovers that Pat and Freddy will be aboard the crack new Streamline Express and he also boards, only to become involved in what appears to be a diamond theft. When Jimmy is falsely accused of the "theft" by blackmailer Gilbert Landon (Sidney Blackmer), Pat comes to her senses, precipitating a hasty and starling conclusion to the mystery of the missing diamond.
Cast
- Victor Jory as Jimmy Hart
- Evelyn Venable as Patricia Wallace
- Esther Ralston as Elaine Vincent
- Erin O'Brien-Moore as Mary Forbes
- Ralph Forbes as Fred Arnold
- Sidney Blackmer as Gilbert Landon
- Vince Barnett as Mr. Jones
- Clay Clement as John Forbes
- Bobby Watson as Gerald Wilson
- Lee Moran as Larry Houston
- Syd Saylor as Smith - Steward
- Libby Taylor as Fawn, Patricia's Maid
- Edward Hearn as Mack - Purser
- Allan Cavan as Senior Conductor
- Wade Boteler as Baggage Gateman
- Harry Tyler as Steve
- Tommy Bupp as Wilbur - Boy with Dog
- Morgan Brown as Bartender
- Jack Raymond as Baggage Man #1
- C. Montague Shaw as Physician
- Lynton Brent as Radio Operator
- Theodore von Eltz as Freddy Arnold
External links
- Streamline Express at the Internet Movie Database
- Streamline Express is available for free download at the Internet Archive