Janet Leigh
26 titles
Filmography
26 results

Grand Slam
(1967)A quiet schoolteacher recruits an elite team of international criminals for the ultimate diamond caper at the frenzied peak of Carnival.

Bye Bye Birdie
(1963)A town pays homage to a rock idol who has been drafted.

Touch of Evil
(1958)Charlton Heston, Janet Leigh and Orson Welles give unforgettable performances in this film noir masterpiece about a crooked police chief and the honorable investigator who tries to stop him.

Holiday Affair
(1949)Romantic drama in which two very different men court a widow. In search of a gift for her son, the widow meets a sales clerk who proceeds to woo her. Her fiance is not impressed.

Houdini
(1953)Tony Curtis gives a winning performance as the great Houdini, the struggling circus performer who emerged as the worldโs most captivating magician and escape artist.

The Naked Spur
(1953)Oscar-nominated story filmed in the stunning Rocky Mountains stars James Stewart as a bounty hunter in pursuit of ruthless outlaw Robert Ryan, and his beautiful girlfriend, Janet Leigh.

The Black Shield of Falworth
(1954)In the reign of King Henry IV, Miles (Tony Curtis) is a peasant determined to save the throne and the Lady Anne (Janet Leigh) in an epic tale filled with jousts, jests and medieval heroics.
Pete Kelly's Blues
(1955)Jack Webb directed and stars in this musical melodrama, along with Janet Leigh, Edmond O'Brien, Peggy Lee, Lee Marvin, Ella Fitzgerald, Martin Milner, Herb Ellis, and Jayne Mansfield. The leader of a jazz band and his fellow musicians try to stand up to a gangster who is extorting them for agent's fees in prohibition-era Kansas City. Several jazz greats perform. A television series was based on this film. Peggy Lee was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress.

Hello Down There
(1969)This 1969 screwball comedy involves a scientist who is given the assignment of spending one month in a simulated underwater home. Once he brings his family around to the idea, underwater mayhem takes over. Look fast for an early appearance by Richard Dreyfuss.

Night of the Lepus
(1972)A hormone intended to alter the breeding cycle of rabbits overrunning ranchlands instead turns them into flesh-eating, 150-pound monsters in Night of the Lepus. Can anything stop these hare?

Scaramouche
(1952)Andre Moreau is a young man determined to avenge the death of his friend at the hand of the Marquis de Maynes. However, the Marquis is the best swordsman in France and, to gain enough time to learn to fight well enough to take him on, Moreau lays low as the clown Scaramouche.

Who Was That Lady?
(1960)A lie told to a suspicious wife entangles a philandering chemistry professor and his TV writer friend into a web of Feds, spies and beautiful women.

Living It Up
(1954)When a man is misdiagnosed with fatal radium poisoning, a newspaper sets him up as a hero and brings him to New York for one last fling, with the full red carpet treatment.

Words and Music
(1948)In this fictionalized account of the partnership of songwriting legends Richard Rogers and Lorenz "Larry" Hart, Richard (Tom Drake), a well-mannered composer, teams up with eccentric but talented wordsmith Larry (Mickey Rooney). After years of failure, they finally manage to hit it big on Broadway. Meanwhile, Richard tries to win over the mature Joyce (Ann Sothern), and Larry, who is attempting to romance vocalist Peggy (Betty Garrett), struggles with depression and a debilitating illness.

The Romance of Rosy Ridge
(1947)Janet Leigh makes an impressive debut alongside Van Johnson in this historical romance in which a farmer's daughter falls in love with a man who fought against her family in the Civil War.
One Is a Lonely Number
(1972)
The Manchurian Candidate
(1962)When a platoon of U.S. soldiers are captured during the Korean War, Major Bennett Marco discovers a diabolical plot involving enemy leaders.

The Vikings
(1958)When a former slave discovers he is the son of a ruthless Viking leader, he competes with his brother for the throne in northern England.

The Story of Lassie
(1994)Since leaping to stardom in a 1943 MGM film, Lassie has represented all that is good about the enduring bonds between human beings and their dogs.

Little Women
(1949)Meet Jo, Beth, Amy and Meg. They're the March sisters, the Little Women of Mervyn LeRoy's Academy Award-winning Technicolor version of the cherished Louisa May Alcott novel. Set during the Civil War, it chronicles the Marches' lives and loves, underscoring the era's expectations about a woman's place in the world.