Dick Irving Hyland

Most Popular Dick Irving Hyland Trailers

Total trailers found: 13

The Threat Trailer (1949)

01 December 1949

A violent escaped con and his gang kidnap the police detective and DA who put him behind bars.

Night Song Trailer (1948)

20 January 1948

A socialite pretends to be poor and blind in her plan to help a blinded pianist.

Her Primitive Man Trailer (1944)

29 May 1944

An anthropologist unwittingly takes a man disguised as a "primitive man" back to New York as a specimen.

I Was a Burlesque Queen Trailer (1953)

13 July 1953

1947 film "Linda, Be Good" with added 3-D scenes with chorus girls.

I Ring Doorbells Trailer (1946)

28 February 1946

Set at a major newspaper, this crime drama centers on a fellow who returns to newspaper reporting after he bombs as a playwright.

Love, Honor and Goodbye Trailer (1945)

15 September 1945

A lawyer's wife walks out on him, then poses as a French nurse to spy on him.

Is It Love or Is It Conscription? Trailer (1941)

21 April 1941

Doris Day sings "Is It Love or Is It Conscription?" with Les Brown and His Orchestra

Hi, Beautiful Trailer (1944)

18 December 1944

Part of the series of Universal B-musicals teaming Martha O'Driscoll and Noah Beery Jr., this film is also a remake of the 1937 comedy Love in a Bungalow.

Linda, Be Good Trailer (1947)

07 November 1947

A writer decides to join a burlesque show so that she can write an authentic expose of the business.

The Price of Fear Trailer (1956)

13 March 1956

A co-owner of a race track goes on the run after witnessing something he shouldn't have at the track.

Night Club Girl Trailer (1945)

05 January 1945

Two show-business wannabees get their big chance to show off their big-time act and talents in a nightclub,and bomb.

New Orleans Trailer (1947)

18 April 1947

A gambling hall owner relocates from New Orleans to Chicago and entertains his patrons with hot jazz by Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, Woody Herman, and others.

Kilroy Was Here Trailer (1947)

19 July 1947

"Kilroy Was Here" was a popular expression during World War II, but it's not much fun to John J. Kilroy, who has to try to live with all the jokes and wisecracks regarding his name.