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- Short film inspired by the "Time's Up" movement. It stars several A-list actresses auditioning for a leading lady role, offering a critique of the casting process. The casting directors ask increasingly ridiculous requests of the women.
- The British government is about to buy the plans to a revolutionary bomb detonator when its plans are stolen and its Austrian inventor murdered. Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson go to Vienna to track down the plans.
- Jodi, an idealistic British drama teacher, travels to a South African town to prepare for a major film role. In rehearsals Jodi's interactions with quirky locals may teach her that there is more to life than lights... camera... and action!
- A zany comedy about two sisters, their gay best friend, and their overzealous stage mom. When one sister gets pregnant and the other plans to waltz out of the closet, the family must hustle to maintain their status quo in the harsh arena of competitive dance.
- Leading Ladies reflects how guilt affects us in different ways based on our perspective or memories. A welcome dinner is the excuse to discover that we always keep a secret from who know us the best.
- A wannabe actress in New York City navigates the ups and downs of following her dreams, dealing with family, and finding love.
- Ryan Gosling and Bianca (The Real Girl) explain their relationship during the making of the movie.
- Hollywood's Leading Ladies is girl talk and beyond, with 5 superstar women offering 5 very different slants on what it took to get there and what it's taking to stay there, as revealed to long-time NBC/CBS News reporter David Sheehan by Julia Roberts, Sharon Stone, Michelle Pfeiffer, Janet Jackson, and Meg Ryan.
- "The Irish Washerwoman" is to be produced by Manager Mathew Talon. The cast is all engaged but the leading lady. Finally in the newspaper Muggs, the playwright, sees the picture of an Irish cook at a downtown restaurant. He insists that she is the type he wants, and Talon must engage her. She goes up and is introduced to the stage manager, Mr. Small. Rehearsal starts, but Bridget entirely unused to the theater, wants to run things her own way. She has a row with Small, which almost comes to blows, but Talon and Muggs smooth matters over and the rehearsal starts again. After many amusing incidents, she goes back to her kitchen, much to the delight of Mr. Murphy, who is having a hard time without her.
- ShortLeading Lady is a comedy with an uplifting, life-affirming message. Bad things happen, but we face them and grow. In Charlotte we have a strong female protagonist who is determined to be the leading lady.
- Star actress Folake Coker just finished her first starring role in the soon to be blockbuster epic Eze Nwanyi. However, what would seem to be an opportunity of a lifetime turns out to be the scariest thing Folake could ever experience as she falls prey to her inner thoughts fueling raw anxiety, depression and paranoia. In neo-noir melancholy and episodic dreaminess, Folake's world is in turmoil and she's desperately looking for a way out before it's too late.
- Unfortunately, Mr. Marsden detects his wife, Helen, in the act of concealing a letter beneath her napkin at the breakfast table and his jealousy is aroused. Helen, the leading lady, is stung by his injustice and refuses to show him the letter. Marsden jumps up from the table, packs his suitcase, and bids farewell to his wife. She is grief-stricken over his heartlessness. The crowds are pouring into the theater, the seats and boxes are filling up. In a prominent box there is a solitary occupant, a handsome, dark-haired young man. He is "Jack," an ardent admirer of Helen's. After the curtain falls for the last time, the actress retires amid a rattling applause, and returns home. Jack follows her, forcing his way into her presence. He makes ardent love and begs her to run away with him. Marsden, suspecting that his wife is in love with Jack, loses no time in reaching the house, where with revolver in hand, he hides behind the portieres and waits the confirmation of his suspicions. His jealousy is completely overthrown by his wife's denunciation of the man who questions her faithfulness and love for her husband. Rage against the man who would rob him of his wife now takes the place of jealousy. He comes from his place of concealment and would have shot the man had not Helen stayed his hand. Angrily dismissing the intruder, Marsden draws near Helen and begs her forgiveness. Trembling with love she turns toward him and nestles in his arms.
- During their father's illness these two sisters have played very different roles. Now life requires one of them to take the lead and show the other a way to overcome the past and re-frame the present.
- When Wood B. Wedd fell into his legacy, one of the first things he did was to look up his old friend Darby Jenks, who, on an earlier occasion, had lent Wood B. a considerable sum of money. Darby, at the time, was managing a dramatic troupe with indifferent success. When he received Wood B.'s letter he danced with joy, For Darby only had four or five dollars left, and his troupe was growing slightly restless. When Wood B. arrived on the scene, the first thing that struck him was the charm of the leading lady. Shortly after Wood B.'s arrival the leading man made a few unpleasant remarks on the utter impossibility of attempting to support himself on three or four dollars every six or seven months, and quit the show abruptly. Wood B., urged on by devotion for his fair divinity of the footlights, and loyalty to his friend, nobly jumped into the breach. Not only would he play the leading man's part, but he would also re-stock the company's depleted treasury. Unversed in the subtleties of stagecraft, Wood B. grew angry when the indignant father of the play threw him out of the window. Returning in haste, he smote the father. The audience at first contented themselves with proffering choice agricultural products to the dazed actors. Then, evidently desirous of a closer acquaintance, they arose and approached the stage in a body. The modest Wood B. fled. So did the entire troupe. The manager and troupe escaped, but the enraged populace caught Wood B. after a long chase. As the disconsolate Darby sat by the tracks waiting for a freight train, a curious object approached him. It was Wood B., tarred and feathered. His feelings were hurt, and Darby did not improve them by facetiously pretending that Wood B. was a daisy and plucking off the feathers to the old refrain of "She loves me; she loves me not."
- Little Leading Ladies is a new docudrama series that follows the lives of five teenage actresses around Los Angeles as the talented ingenues attempt to climb to the top of the competitive Hollywood entertainment industry. With twists and turns, ups and downs and everything in between, the young performers will show the true reality of what it takes to rise to the top and be a true little LEADING LAD.
- In 1922, an aspiring small town actress sets out to Hollywood to direct her own film.
- A single mom attempts to live her dream through her six-year old daughter.
- A woman becomes the main attraction of a road show and finds it isn't all it's cracked up to be.
- The Nestor company is about to be disrupted because of the lack of a leading lady. That night the director attends an opera performance. You can imagine his joy when he notices one of the performers is a very pretty girl and the ideal type for a leading lady. He quickly makes her acquaintance and she is engaged on the spot by him. When the new leading woman arrives, Eddie and Lee at once fall in love with her, and rush to show her around the place. But the director, wishing to make up for lost time, orders all to make up for a new picture. Eddie, however, gains the lady's promise to allow him to bring her out each morning in his "real" car. Next morning Eddie takes the new leading lady into his car and they set out. But it is quite a distance to Universal City, and on the way his "real" car has a mishap. Lee, coming along, sees his predicament and persuades the girl to get in with him, lest she be late for the first morning. She does so, and Eddie is left bewailing his bad luck. Lee's exuberance receives a setback when he is selected to play the villain in the new play Eddie is given the hero part, much to his delight. They rehearse the scene which is laid about a girl's college in a fictitious town. Eddie and Lee are at outs on every occasion, and each complains about the other's methods. Lee finally gets a pistol and breaks up the set. That evening, while they are arguing as to who shall take the girl home, Gus, the smallest actor of the lot, calmly walks off with the girl and Eddie and Lee pledge their long friendship anew, vowing that a woman will never come between them again.
- Kitty Lightfoot appears at the hotel in the town in which she is about to play, accompanied by her maid and her poodle dog. Unfortunately for the poodle, the hotel does not accommodate him and rather than be deprived of her dear dog, Kitty Lightfoot hits upon a scheme. Hastening to the nearest baby haberdasher she buys the necessary outfit and on a bench in the park dresses the poodle dog in the baby's haberdashery and returns to the hotel. The soft warm bundle in her arms passes muster with the new clerk who comes on duty and everything goes as smoothly as a marriage bell until the poodle lamps the hotel cat and in one-half a second the poodle dog is in full cry with puss cat in the lead by 2 feet 4 inches. Puss cat hikes for the dining room, which she goes through with the poodle dog at her heels. Next the kitchen, then the corridor, finally the front hall, then the lobby where the clerk is so scared he falls over the waste basket and cracks his shin against the safe. The poodle dog's race is rudely interrupted by the strong arm of the law in the shape of a policeman who has come in on hearing the noise, and finally Fido and the leading lady are ignominiously thrust into jail.