Lurene Tuttle
8 titles
Filmography
8 results

Ma Barker's Killer Brood
(1960)Dramatizes the life and exploits of Katie “Ma” Barker and her four sons in their terror campaign throughout the U.S. Midwest during the outlaw era.

Room for One More
(1952)A good-hearted wife, her engineer husband, and their three kids are a typical American family—except that they take in homeless animals and children.

Goodbye, My Fancy
(1951)A congresswoman who returns to her alma mater to accept an honorary degr ee, and finds herself romantically involved with both the college president and a magazine photographer.

Don't Bother to Knock
(1952)Pilot Jed Towers has his eye on the beautiful Nell Forbes, a babysitter, while staying at a hotel in New York City. However, he soon discovers that his new crush is deranged and dangerous.

The Fortune Cookie
(1966)When a cameraman is clobbered during a football game, his brother-in-law advises to feign an injury so they can split the money from insurance claims.

The Affairs of Dobie Gillis
(1953)All I Do Is Dream of You. Not a bad preoccupation for singing lovebirds Dobie (Bobby Van) and Pansy (Debbie Reynolds). But they may want to add more to their cranial cogitations. Like dour Prof. Pomfritt's English class. And chemistry of the test tube and bunsen-burner kind. Dobie and Pansy are students at Grainbelt U., where the motto is Learn, learn, learn. Work, work, work. Yet who can blame them for having fun, fun, fun in this musical comedy scripted by Dobie author Max Shulman? Bob Fosse (one year from his breakthrough The Pajama Game stage choreography) plays Dobie's roomie and fellow skirt-chaser, showing wow, wow, wow brilliance with Van in the exuberant You Can't Do Wrong Doin' Right.
The Ghost & Mr. Chicken
(1966)A meek Kansas typesetter who wants to be a reporter spends the night in a haunted house.
Sincerely Yours
(1955)Fabulous pianist/television superstar Liberace headlines this showbiz romance with songs depicting the life and loves of a concert pianist who brings happiness to many empty lives and eventually finds happiness for himself. Tony Warrin has it all. A popular pianist who plays any style, he has money, great clothes, a penthouse overlooking Central Park, a rich blond fiancée, a loyal brunette secretary secretly in love with him, and a date at Carnegie Hall. But on concert night, disease deafens him. While medical science works on a cure, he must find other ventures. He learns lip reading and, using high-powered binoculars, eavesdrops on conversations in the park. When he finds people in need, he plays God, interceding with help. Meanwhile, his fiancée is falling in love with another man, and his secretary quits. But when his doctors give him new hope, Carnegie Hall and true love may once again be within his reach.