Henry Travers
9 titles
Filmography
9 results

The Bells of St. Mary's
(1945)Charming classic of Old Hollywood about a reverend and a nun whose friendly rivalry ends up winning a huge gift for their Catholic school.

The Invisible Man
(1933)Claude Rains stars in this thriller, based on H.G. Wells' novel, about a mysterious doctor who discovers a serum that makes him invisible and then slowly drives him to commit acts of terror.

Ball of Fire
(1941)A group of professors working on a new encyclopedia encounter a mouthy nightclub singer who is wanted by the police to help bring down her mob boss lover.

It's a Wonderful Life
(1946)An angel is sent from Heaven to help a desperately frustrated businessman by showing him what life would have been like if he had never existed.
The Girl from Jones Beach
(1949)Former United States President Ronald Reagan stars as a magazine illustrator who has drawn the "perfect woman" for an illustration ... but then he finds her in real life when he meets The Girl from Jones Beach.

The Flame
(1947)Martin Scorsese Presents REPUBLIC REDISCOVERED—over 20 rarely seen films from the storied Republic Pictures library, restored and remastered by Paramount and personally curated by Martin Scorsese. In The Flame a man constantly jealous of his half-brother tries to con him by concocting a gold digging scheme with his girlfriend, only to have her actually fall in love with their mark.
Edison, the Man
(1940)
Dark Victory
(1939)Bette Davis stars as a hedonistic socialite who learns to value the simple things in life after being diagnosed with a fatal brain tumor in this three-hanky drama.
I'll Wait for You
(1941)A remake of Robert Montgomery's 1934 hit Hide-Out, this superb film directed by Robert B. Sinclair (known for his classic Broadway productions of The Philadelphia Story, Dodsworth and Pride and Prejudice) creates a mesmerizing dance between innocence and a life gone wrong. When a gangster's frontman (Sterling) is wounded by police, he escapes to a farm where he's taken in by a kindhearted family. Lying about his identity and hiding out from the law, he soon finds himself in love with the oldest daughter (Marsha Hunt) and even becomes close friends with her younger sister (Virginia Weidler). It's not until the detectives on his trail finally catch up to him that he undergoes a powerful life-transforming shift. This unusual Hollywood love story mixed with a gangster-themed police caper revealed undeniable chemistry between the two leads, Sterling and Hunt, who were again teamed in a 1941 film, The Penalty.