Frank Ryan


Director

Biography

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Made For Each Other (1939) -- (Movie Clip) Blood Transfusion Angling for his promotion, strapped Jane (Carole Lombard) and John (James Stewart) are entertaining his boss Judge Doolittle (Charles Coburn), his frowning daughter (Ruth Weston) and rival Carter (Donald Briggs), the temporary maid (Esther Dale) making trouble, in Made For Each Other, 1939.
Girl, A Guy And A Gob, A (1941) -- (Movie Clip) MIdget-Minded Stuffed-Shirt Lucille Ball as secretary Dot, thrilled to be called as a sub for the boss at her new job, not knowing he (Edmond O'Brien as Herrick) is the “guy” she inconvenienced at the opera the night before, Frank McGlynn his smarmy aide, in A Girl, A Guy And A Gob, 1941, co-starring George Murphy.
Girl, A Guy And A Gob, A (1941) -- (Movie Clip) Why Doesn't He Assert Himself? First scene, Edmond O'Brien is Stephen, the rich "guy" at the opera with snooty fiancée and mom (Marguerite Chapman, Nella Walker), not expecting to meet the "girl" (Lucille Ball) and family (George Cleveland, Kathleen Howard, Lloyd Corrigan), in RKO's A Girl, A Guy And A Gob (1941).
Girl, A Guy And A Gob, A (1941) -- (Movie Clip) Tatoo Artist In Singapore First scene for the “gob,” George Murphy as wrestler and navy man “Coffee Cup,” surprising girlfriend Dot (Lucille Ball), and her mother (Kathleen Howard), father (George Cleveland) and brother (Lloyd Corrigan), in RKO’s A Girl, A Guy And A Gob, 1941, also starring Edmond O’Brien.
Girl, A Guy And A Gob, A (1941) -- (Movie Clip) That's How Angels Are Made Edmond O’Brien is Herrick, enjoying an impromptu evening with new secretary Dot (Lucille Ball) and her colorful sailor boyfriend Coffe-Cup (George Murphy, the future senator and accomplished dancer), Leon Belasco the cabbie, Carol Hughes in the dance hall, in A Girl, A Guy And A Gob, 1941.
Can't Help Singing -- (Movie Clip) Any Moment Now Following an interlude in the Sierra Nevada with her boyfriend, Caroline (Deanna Durbin) finds and orchestra and performs Any Moment Now by Jerome Kern and E.Y. Harburg in Can't Help Singing, 1944.

Bibliography