Ollie Kirby

Ollie Kirby

Movies for Ollie Kirby...

Modern Youth
Title: Modern Youth
Released: April 10, 1926
Type: Movie
Modern Youth is a lost silent film.
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Stop at Nothing
Title: Stop at Nothing
Character: Slick Sadie
Released: February 17, 1924
Type: Movie
Two competing jewel thieves hunt for a load of diamonds.
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The Tango Cavalier
Title: The Tango Cavalier
Character: Carmelita
Released: September 15, 1923
Type: Movie
Don Armingo, a member of the Secret Service, is inspired while dancing the tango to join a group of smugglers at the Mexican border. As he is about to make the arrest, they take flight, kidnapping Don's sweetheart. Following in his airplane, he circles above the getaway car and plucks the girl from the tonneau cover just as it speeds over an embankment.
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The Further Adventures of Stingaree
Title: The Further Adventures of Stingaree
Character: The Governor's Wife
Released: June 1, 1917
Type: Movie
The movie serial sequel featuring Stingaree
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The Menace
Title: The Menace
Character: Maura
Released: December 15, 1916
Type: Movie
Episode of Grant, Police Reporter
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The Last Chapter
Title: The Last Chapter
Character: Mary Brown
Released: December 1, 1914
Type: Movie
Gordon, a young war correspondent, after being wounded in the jungles of Africa, is picked up and taken back to England by James Egerton, a wealthy rubber magnate, who has been investigating conditions on his plantation, where there has been a great shortage in the year's yield. On the voyage homeward the correspondent and Egerton's daughter Alice fall in love.
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The Key to Yesterday
Title: The Key to Yesterday
Character: Undetermined Role
Released: October 12, 1914
Type: Movie
George Carter, a revolutionist in South America, is the exact double of Frederick Marston, a famous artist in Paris. Carter is betrayed by a comrade and is sentenced to be shot. He takes a desperate chance and escapes on board a vessel bound for London. In Paris Marston is stabbed by a model because he does not return her love. The wound incapacitates him from painting, and leaves an ugly scar, and he goes to America on a vacation. Highwaymen attack him, inflicting injuries which cause a total loss of memory. The robbers leave nothing in his pockets but the key to his Paris studio, and Marston adopts the name of Robert Anglo-Saxon.