The best Nancy Kovack’s romance movies

Nancy Kovack

Nancy Kovack

11/03/1935 (89 años)
If you love cinema, you will share this ranking of the best Nancy Kovack’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 Nancy Kovack.

Frankie and Johnny

Frankie and Johnny
5.5/10
Johnny is a riverboat entertainer with a big gambling problem. After a fortune-teller tells Johnny how he can change his luck, the appearance of a new 'lady luck' soon causes a cat fight with Johnny's girlfriend, Frankie.

Strangers When We Meet

Strangers When We Meet
7.1/10
  • Genre: Romance
  • Release: 29/06/1960
  • Character: Marcia
A suburban architect loves his wife but is bored with his marriage and with his work, so he takes up with the neglected, married beauty who lives down the street.

Sylvia

Sylvia
6.6/10
Sylvia West (Carroll Baker) may not be who she says she is. Her fiancé, the very well-to-do Frederick Summers (Peter Lawford), hires an investigator named Alan Maklin (George Maharis) to do some digging, and what he finds out about her life prior to becoming a writer is quite shocking. Will the newfound knowledge ruin the marriage? Gordon Douglas (Young at Heart) directs this drama, which is based on E.V. Cunningham's book.

Cry for Happy

Cry for Happy
5.8/10
  • Genre: ComedyRomance
  • Release: 03/03/1961
  • Character: Camille Cameron
Army photographers on leave in Japan take over a geisha house.

Enter Laughing

Enter Laughing
6.3/10
  • Genre: ComedyRomance
  • Release: 25/02/1967
  • Character: Linda aka Miss B
David Kolowitz, a nice young man living with his parents in New York City in 1938, works at a machine repair shop. His parents want David to study to become a pharmacist. But what he really wants is to be an actor like his idol, Ronald Colman. One day, at his friend Marvin's suggestion, David tries out for a part in a play, and gets it, despite his obvious lack of acting experience (not to mention ability). True, it's a rather small part in a low-rent production. Leading the troupe is a washed-up, alcoholic actor who hires David at the urging of his actress-daughter, who finds David "cute." To play his part, David must come up with his own costume - a tuxedo - and pay the house five dollars a week, ostensibly for tuition. But it is David's first acting job, one which calls for him to "enter laughing." And if it doesn't work out - well, there's always pharmacy school.

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