Product Tag - blondie

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    Blondie

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    Blondie

    Blondie is the first of two TV series based on the comic strip of the same name. It first aired on January 4, 1957, on NBC. Although Penny Singleton had starred in most of the Blondie movies, producers chose Pamela Britton for the title role, with Arthur Lake playing the role of Dagwood Bumstead as he had in the Blondie movie series.

    A pilot episode was filmed in 1954 with Hal Le Roy as Dagwood opposite Britton’s Blondie. The DVD for the 1957 version of Blondie was later released but only includes the first three episodes.

    $56.00
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    It's a Great Life (1943)

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    It’s a Great Life (1943)

    When the profits of their various film series began slumping in the mid-1940s, Columbia Pictures tried to broaden the appeal of these films by disguing the fact that they were indeed series entries. Thus it was that Columbia’s 13th “Blondie” picture was shipped out as It’s a Great Life. The comic confusion begins when Dagwood Bumstead (Arthur Lake), intending to buy a house, buys a horse instead. Before the film’s 75 minutes have run their course, Dagwood gets mixed up in a fox hunt. But Blondie (Penny Singleton) saves the day as usual, with the help of eccentric millionaire Timothy Brewster (Hugh Herbert). After It’s a Great Life and #14 “Footlight Glamour”, Columbia restored the name “Blondie” to the titles of all subesequent installments in this long-running comedy series.

    $15.00
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    Blondie Goes Latin (1941)

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    Blondie Goes Latin (1941)

    The 8th film in the Blondie series – Blondie Goes Latin. Mr. Dithers invites the Bumstead’s on a South American cruise. Somehow Dagwood winds up as the female drummer in the ship’s band, while Penny Singleton gets to show off her Broadway background in some lively musical numbers.

    $15.00
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    Blondie Plays Cupid (1940)

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    Blondie Plays Cupid (1940)

    The Bumstead family is off to see relatives in the country when Blondie runs into Charlie and Millie, an eloping couple needing her help.

    $15.00
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    Blondie's New York and the Making of Parallel Lines (2014)

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    Blondie’s New York and the Making of Parallel Lines (2014)

    The story behind Blondie’s album Parallel Lines, which sold 16 million copies and captured the spirit of 1970s New York at a time of poverty, crime and an exploding artistic life.

    $15.00
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    Blondie Has Servant Trouble

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    Blondie Has Servant Trouble

    Few of the popular Blondie films strayed as far off the tried-and-true Blondie formula as “Blondie Has Servant Trouble” (#6 in the series). Things get under way when Blondie Bumstead (Penny Singleton) demands that her husband Dagwood (Arthur Lake) request a raise from his boss Mr. Dithers (Jonathan Hale), so that Blondie can afford to hire a maid. But Dithers has no time for any salary disputes: his construction firm is currently stuck with an unsaleable old mansion, which is rumored to be haunted. To disprove this theory, Dithers asks the Bumstead family to spend a night in the crumbling old house, throwing a retinue of servants into the bargain. Homicidal maniacs? The Bumsteads in mortal danger? But even a done 1000 times ‘Haunted House-Homicidal Maniac’ storyline somehow works here.. Because in the end, no matter what, there’s always Penny Singleton as “Blondie”.

    $25.00
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    Blondie

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    Blondie

    Blondie and Dagwood are about to celebrate their fifth wedding anniversary but this happy occasion is marred when the bumbling Dagwood gets himself involved in a scheme that is promising financial ruin for the Bumstead family. Camping on the porch of the Poor House would become the most-used prevalent plot line in the 27 series-films that followed. It was also an issue in the comic-strip for about a year after its inception when it was basically a continuity strip but, aside from Dagwood’s inability to coax a pay-raise from Mr. Dithers over the years, the financial status of the family was seldom an issue when the format switched to a gag-a-day strip.

    $25.00
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