
November 12, 1920 · 105 years old
Richard Quine (November 12, 1920 – June 10, 1989) was an American stage, film, and radio actor and film director. Quine was born in Detroit. He made his Broadway debut in the Jerome Kern/Oscar Hammerstein II musical Very Warm for May in 1939 and appeared in My Sister Eileen the following year. His…

A modern-day witch likes her neighbor but despises his fiancée, so she enchants him to love her instead.

The sprightly young assistant of a Hollywood screenwriter helps him over his writer's block by acting out his fantasies of possible plots.

A dedicated bachelor drunkenly marries a young woman and immediately lives to regret it.

A womanizing reporter for a sleazy tabloid magazine impersonates his hen-pecked neighbor in order to get an expose on renowned psychologist Helen Gurley Brown.

Jane Osgood runs a lobster business, which supports her two young children. Railroad staff inattention ruins her shipment, so with her lawyer George, Jane sues Harry Foster Malone, director of the line and the "meanest man in the ...

A businessman moves to Hong Kong to pursue a career as an artist and falls in love with a prostitute he hires as a model.

After submitting a story of her beautiful sister, a woman assumes her identity to maintain the attention of a playboy publisher.

Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney star in a musical directed by Busby Berkeley as two talented teenagers dreaming of success as Babes on Broadway.

In order to save King Rudolph of Ruritania from assassins and murderous usurpers, the kingdom hires a look-a-like London cabby to impersonate the Monarch.

A federal agent attempts to make some real money before the alcohol ban is lifted so he sets his sights on the whiskey cache of an old army buddy.

Chuck Dederich, a recovering alcoholic, founds Synanon House, a rehabilitation center for people with all kinds of addictions.