The best Mary Carlisle’s music movies

Mary Carlisle

Mary Carlisle

03/02/1914- 01/08/2018
If you love cinema, you will share this ranking of the best Mary Carlisle’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 Mary Carlisle.

Madam Satan

Madam Satan
6.3/10
Angela and Bob Brooks are an upper class couple. Bob is an unfaithful husband. Angela has a plan to win back his affections.

Dance, Girl, Dance

Dance, Girl, Dance
6.8/10
Judy O'Brien is an aspiring ballerina in a dance troupe. Also in the company is Bubbles, a brash mantrap who leaves the struggling troupe for a career in burlesque. When the company disbands, Bubbles gives Judy a thankless job as her stooge. The two eventually clash when both fall for the same man.

College Humor

College Humor
5.9/10
A college professor and the school's star football player are both rivals for the same beautiful coed.

Doctor Rhythm

Doctor Rhythm
5.9/10
Dr. Bill Remsen pretends to be a policeman, and ends up being assigned to guard Judy Marlowe. Amazingly, he falls in love with her.

Palooka

Palooka
6/10
  • Genre: ComedyMusic
  • Release: 26/01/1934
  • Character: Anne Howe
Joe Palooka is a naive young man whose father Pete was a champion boxer, but his lifestyle caused Joe's mother Mayme to leave him and to take young Joe to the country to raise him.

Children of Pleasure

Children of Pleasure
5.5/10
A successful songwriter, dazzled by high society, falls for a society girl who is just playing around.

The Sweetheart of Sigma Chi

The Sweetheart of Sigma Chi
6.5/10
A campus flirt who has been "pinned" by most of the boys of Sigma Chi fraternity falls for a no-nonsense athlete who doesn't have time for such diversions as women.

Rovin' Tumbleweeds

Rovin' Tumbleweeds
6.6/10
  • Genre: MusicWestern
  • Release: 16/11/1939
  • Character: Mary Ford
Rancher Autry takes a job singing on the radio to aid farmers and ranchers whose lands were destroyed by raging floods. Blaming crooked politicians, he goes to Washington and tries to put through a food control bill and finds he has a lot to learn. In this classic release, Gene introduces his immortal theme song, "Back in the Saddle Again," which has gone on to become a piece of American History.

Lady Be Careful

Lady Be Careful
6.1/10
Previously filmed in 1930 as True to the Navy, Kenyon Nicholson's old stage farce Sailor Beware returned to the screen in 1936 as Lady Be Careful. The plot remains substantially the same, as an amorous sailor named Dynamite (Lew Ayres) bets his pals that he can "thaw" icy beauty-contest winner Billie (Mary Carlisle). What follows is a series of misunderstandings, arguments and reconciliations, all wrapped up in a happy-ever-after conclusion.

The Old Homestead

The Old Homestead
6.5/10
A New York radio talent scout turns up at a barn dance.

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