Susan Foster Movies
American actress/singer
Susanna Foster was 11 years old when a friend of her family recorded her voice and sent the results to MGM. That studio had recently lost
Deanna Durbin to Universal, thus was casting about for a pre-teen songstress who could be groomed for stardom. Foster sat out her contract taking singing lessons, and was dropped before she'd even seen a camera, reportedly due to an MGM executive who was promoting his own wife. Paramount cast Foster in a tiny role in
The Great Victor Herbert (1939), which led to an "introducing" assignment in
There's Magic in Music (1939). In a deliberate attempt to avoid the cutesy-poo image of
Deanna Durbin, Foster was cast in her first starring picture as a street-wise toughie who happened to have a gorgeous voice. This image didn't stick, and soon Foster was playing goodie-goodies. In 1942, Universal studios, which always liked to have a few stray sopranos on hand just in case, signed Foster to co-star with
Nelson Eddy and
Claude Rains in
The Phantom of the Opera (1943). As always, Foster sang like an angel, but her acting was easily overshadowed by both Rains and Eddy. In 1944, Universal decided to re-use the Phantom sets for a similar period musical,
The Climax, which paired Foster with
Boris Karloff--again no contest. Outgrowing her youthful charm, Foster became hard to cast (and somewhat difficult personally, it is said). Realizing that Universal didn't have anything worthwhile lined up for her, Foster retired from the screen, declaring that she'd always hated her film career. Following an unsuccessful marriage to singer
Wilbur Evans,
Susanna Foster faded into private life, taking clerical work to support herself and her sons and turning down all offers to resume her singing career. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

- 1973
- R
This adventurous horror movie chronicles the exploits of a boy whose father is changed into a wolfman. The trouble begins after the newly separated father and his son are attacked by a werewolf on a camping trip. Once the wife figures out what happened, she divorces him. The boy tries to explain it to the authorities, but they disbelieve him at first. Eventually they do believe, and the werewolf is finally slain. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- 1971
-
Described in the original TV Guide listings as "one of the series' gentle-message shows" (was there ever any other kind on The Partridge Family?), this episode features Jay Ripley as Wendell, a 16-year-old nerd who has fallen for Laurie (Susan Dey). Danny (Danny Bonaduce) decides to play matchmaker between his sister and Wendell, but eventually realizes that the boy needs self-confidence more than romance. Watch for Ann Jillian in a small role. Song: "I'm On My Way Back Home". ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1971
- PG
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Actor/auteur Tom Laughlin created the character of Billy Jack in the motorcycle flick The Born Losers. Wandering Christlike through the Southwest, Native American Vietnam veteran Billy Jack -- soft-spoken, but well-versed in martial arts -- champions the cause of a progressive school run by Jean Roberts (Delores Taylor, Laughlin's real-life wife). The bigoted white townsfolk don't cotton to Jean's minority-group students, so they do everything they can to humiliate and physically abuse the kids. When one of her charges is cruelly coated with white flour, Billy Jack goes berserk. Thus begins an orgy of self-righteous violence, culminating with our hero being hunted down on a murder charge. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Tom Laughlin, Delores Taylor, (more)

- 1967
- PG
- Add The Born Losers to Queue
One of the first recognizable "vigilante" films in American cinema, The Born Losers tells the story of Billy Jack (writer-director Tom Laughlin), a half-breed ex-Green Beret and Vietnam veteran who makes it his business to rescue a cute mod girl from a crew of vicious bikers. Much to his chagrin, however, he finds his lethal training gets him in as much trouble with the racist cops as with the bikers, and he soon becomes embroiled in a violent struggle against all parties involved. There is blood-letting and bone-breaking to burn in The Born Losers, not to mention lots of preaching on the part of Laughlin. However, it still tops the more famous sequel, Billy Jack, and it qualifies writer-director-star Laughlin for the status of true auteur. ~ Jeremy Beday, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Tom Laughlin, Elizabeth James, (more)