Evelyn Dall Movies

1944  
 
In this sci-fi comedy, a nutty inventor and his loyal butler use his time machine to travel to Elizabethan times. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1943  
 
In this musical an American's daughter owns an escort agency. Even though WW II rages and men are hungry for females, the woman's business is flagging until she comes up with some enterprising schemes to turn things around. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1942  
 
Add King Arthur Was a Gentleman to Queue
A British soldier stationed in Africa comes to believe that he is in possession of Arthur's Excalibur in this drama. The expert swordsman comes to believe this after he is named a hero during a duel. He attributes his skill and courage to the famous weapon. Later he is deeply embarrassed to learns that it is not Arthur's sword. This does not keep him from saving his friends from enemy hands. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1941  
 
Based on Monica Ewer's novel Ring O'Roses, the British musiccomedy He Found a Star is dominated by the thousand-watt personality of music hall favorite Vic Oliver. He's cast as Lucky Lyndon, a seedy but enthusiastic talent agent specializing in small-time variety acts. Lyndon spends the entire picture searching for the next "big star", never realizing that his secretary Ruth Cavour (played by Sarah Churchill, Winston's daughter) is madly in love with him. By the time he's figured out what's what, Lyndon has nearly come to grief trying to promote ungrateful nightclub songstress Suzanne (Evelyn Dall). An average subject at best, He Found a Star is distinguished by the creative cinematography of Oscar-winning lensman Ernest Palmer. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Vic OliverSarah Churchill, (more)
1938  
 
This British musical comedy was designed as a vehicle for popular 1930s bandleader Ambrose, here cast as "himself". The plot, which was the handiwork of no fewer than four scenarists, is the old one about the pretty but unappreciated slavey (Evelyn Dall) who is suddenly and spectacularly thrust into high society, much to the discomfort of her evil guardian. In other words, it's Cinderella in modern dress. But never mind all that: the film's real attraction is its unending parade of specialty performers. American jazz singer Harry Richman may be a bit hard to take for contemporary audiences (he wasn't exactly everyone's favorite in 1938!), but celebrity impressionist Florence Desmond is as delightful as ever as the film's nominal villain. Far better produced than most British "revue" pictures of the era, Kicking the Moon Around did excellent business, but Ambrose didn't care much for moviemaking and returned to the nightclub and music-hall circuit. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Evelyn Dall
1937  
 
Top British radio stores perform in this musical revue. The many acts are hosted by the popular team of Clamphan & Dwyer and are designed to offer competition for the commercial broadcasts that come in from mainland Europe. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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