Suzanne Pleshette
12 titles
Filmography
12 results

Battling for Baby
(1992)After Katherine (Courteney Cox) decides to return to work to help pay the bills, her baby's grandmothers (Debbie Reynolds & Suzanne Pleshette) argue over who will take care of her child.

Alone in the Neon Jungle
(1988)Assigned to clean up Pittsburgh's most corrupt and demoralized precinct, a by-the-books police captain is greeted with suspicion and hostility.

Support Your Local Gunfighter
(1971)When a charming con man is mistaken for an infamous gunfighter, he decides to impersonate the gunfighter so he can earn money to pay his debts.

The Ugly Dachshund
(1966)Newlywed dog fanciers contend with their Great Dane's identity crisis after raising him with a litter of dachshunds.

The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin
(1967)A Boston debutante joins the San Francisco gold rush with her brother and Griffin, their British butler.

The Shaggy D.A.
(1976)A District Attorney candidate finds himself transformed into a sheepdog.

The Legend of Valentino
(1975)Rudolph Valentino was a Hollywood star and widely regarded as the silver screen's first male sex symbol. This dramatized biographical picture stars Frank Nero, Yvette Mimieux, Judd Hirsch, and Milton Berle.

Oh, God! Book II
(1980)Chagrined at the bad press he's getting, the Almighty returns to earth and recruits a fifth grader to help him devise a spiritual PR campaign.

Blackbeard's Ghost
(1968)A track coach inherits the mischievous ghost of famed pirate Blackbeard.

The Birds
(1963)Nothing equals The Birds for sheer terror when Alfred Hitchcock unleashes his foul friends in one of his most shocking and memorable masterpieces. As beautiful blonde Melanie Daniels (Tippi Hedren) rolls into Bodega Bay in pursuit of eligible bachelor Mitch Brenner (Rod Taylor), she is inexplicably attacked by a seagull. Suddenly thousands of birds are flocking into town, preying on schoolchildren and residents in a terrifying series of attacks. Soon Mitch and Melanie are fighting for their lives against a deadly force that can't be explained and can't be stopped in one of Hollywood's most horrific films of nature gone berserk.

Nevada Smith
(1966)The part-Indian character from Harold Robbins' "The Carpetbaggers" hunts down his parents' killers.

The Geisha Boy
(1958)Comedy starring Jerry Lewis as Gilbert Wooley, a second-rate magician who, along with his pet rabbit Harry, is sent to entertain the troops in the Pacific during World War II. During his time in Japan he becomes attached to a little orphan boy, Mitsuo (Robert Hirano), who tries to follow Gilbert back to the US - leading to Gilbert being accused by the authorities of kidnapping.