The best Ann Pennington’s movies

Ann Pennington

Ann Pennington

If you love cinema, you will share this ranking of the best Ann Pennington’s movies, although you may have ordered them differently. In any case, we hope you love it and with a little luck discovering a movie that you still don’t know about Ann Pennington.
Genre:
Year:

China Girl

China Girl
6.2/10
  • Genre: Drama
  • Release: 09/12/1942
  • Character: Entertainer
Two-fisted newsreel photographer Johnny Williams is stationed in Burma and China in the early stage of WW II. Captured by the Japanese, he escapes from a concentration camp with the aid of beautiful, enigmatic 'China Girl' Miss Young. The two arduously make their way back to friendly lines so that Johnny can deliver the vital military information he's managed to glean from his captors.

Texas Terrors

Texas Terrors
6.6/10
  • Genre: Western
  • Release: 22/11/1940
  • Character: Dancer
A lawyer by training, Bob Millburne (Don "Red" Barry) believes in relying on the legal system to exact justice. But he can no longer sate his thirst for vengeance, fueled by the death of his parents at the hands of a bloodthirsty mine jumper. Frustrated and fed up, Bob decides it's time to dust off his guns and holsters.

Pretty Ladies

Pretty Ladies
5.1/10
  • Genre: ComedyDrama
  • Release: 06/09/1925
  • Character: Herself
Maggie, a headlining comedienne with the Follies, takes a fall off the stage into the orchestra pit and lands on the drum of musician Al Cassidy. One thing leads to another, they fall in love and get married. Al becomes a famous songwriter and Maggie stays home and has children. One day Al is hired to write a big number for Selma Larson, one of the Follies' most beautiful stars, and falls for her.

Manhandled

Manhandled
6.7/10
  • Genre: ComedyDrama
  • Release: 21/07/1924
  • Character: Herself
Comedy which concerns the struggles of an ambitious department store sales clerk who is caught up in New York high society.

Happy Days

Happy Days
5.5/10
  • Genre: Music
  • Release: 16/09/1929
  • Character: Dancer - 'Snake Hips' Number
Margie, singer on a showboat, decides to try her luck in New York inspite of being in love with the owners grandson. She is successful, but suddenly she hears that the showboat is in deep financial trouble, and she calls all the boats former stars to join in a big show to rescue it.

Night Parade

Night Parade
5.6/10
  • Genre: Drama
  • Release: 27/10/1929
  • Character: Ann Pennington
Bobby Martin, a young middleweight champion boxer, is an honest and decent fighter. However, a dishonest but beautiful woman uses every trick to ensnare him.

Tanned Legs

Tanned Legs
5.3/10
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 10/11/1929
  • Character: Tootie
Peggy and Bill are high society lovebirds, but their marriage plans are put on hold while Peggy spends most of her summer straightening out her wayward parents and her unlucky-in-love sister Janet. Mama and Papa are set to rights fairly quickly, but Janet's the one with real problems. It seems she sent some compromising love letters to a worthless cad, and now the bounder wants to use the letters for blackmail. Peggy's friend Roger and his flapper sweetheart Tootie hatch an elaborate plan to retrieve the incriminating letters and salvage Janet's reputation.

Madame Behave

Madame Behave
6.6/10
  • Release: 06/12/1925
  • Character: Gwen Townley
A cross-dressing farce, adapted from "Madame Lucy" by Jean Arlette, in which to help a friend in a lawsuit, Jack Mitchell disguises himself as the mysterious "Madame Brown," a missing witness important to the case of the plaintiff. He attracts the romantic attention of two old roués and one hot Broadway showgirl.

The Lucky Horseshoe

The Lucky Horseshoe
5.6/10
  • Genre: Western
  • Release: 30/08/1925
  • Character: Dancer
Based on a story by Robert Lord, the film is about a ranch foreman who assumes responsibility for the ranch following the owner's death. He also cares for the owner's daughter who is taken to Europe by an aunt. Two year later the woman returns from Europe with her new wealthy fiancée and plans to hold their wedding at the ranch, which the foreman has turned into a successful tourist destination. The foreman's feelings for the woman have not been diminished by the years, and after learning some damaging information about the fiancée, the foreman must find a way to stop the wedding. (Wiki)

Is Everybody Happy?

Is Everybody Happy?
  • Release: 19/10/1929
Is Everybody Happy? (1929) is an American Pre-Code musical film starring Ted Lewis, Alice Day, Lawrence Grant, Ann Pennington, and Julia Swayne Gordon, directed by Archie Mayo, and released by Warner Bros. It is the story of Ted Lewis, popular band leader and clarinettist. The music for the film was written by Harry Akst and Grant Clarke, except for "St. Louis Blues" by W. C. Handy and "Tiger Rag". The film's title comes from Lewis's catchphrase "Is everybody happy?" The film's soundtrack exists on Vitaphone discs preserved at the UCLA Film and Television Archive, but the film itself is considered a lost film, according to the Vitaphone Project website. A five minute clip from the film can be found on YouTube.

A Kiss in the Dark

A Kiss in the Dark
7.8/10
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 06/04/1925
  • Character: Specialty Dancer
Based on a Frederick Lonsdale Broadway play.

The Golden Strain

The Golden Strain
  • Genre: Western
  • Release: 27/12/1925
Lt. Milt Mulford graduates from West Point and is assigned to a cavalry outpost in the West, near an Apache reservation. One day the Apaches, tired of being cheated by a crooked Indian agent, break the reservation and Mulford is sent after them with a patrol. Unfortunately, he cracks under the pressure of his first firefight, and is thrown out of the army. His fiancé, disgusted, ends their engagement. He sets out to prove that he is not a coward and regain his fiancé's love.

The Antics of Ann

The Antics of Ann
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release: 05/11/1917
  • Character: Ann Wharton
Ann Wharton, a rambunctious young student at the prestigious Bredwell Academy, is in trouble after a spoonful of cereal she flung at a classmate hits Mrs. Bredwell in the face. As she is being reprimanded in Mrs. Bredwell's office, a misunderstanding results in a member of the football team arriving at the office with Ann's clothes--she had left them behind when she changed into a football uniform so she could play football with the team--and Mrs. Bredwell writes to Ann's father notifying him that Ann is being expelled. She intercepts the letter, but her troubles are far from over.

Related actors