Donald Meek
12 titles
Filmography
12 results

The Hole in the Wall
(1929)After being sent to prison on a false charge, a scorned woman seeks revenge, but a gangster and a newspaperman may throw a wrench in her plans.

The Fabulous Joe
(1947)This screwball comedy features a henpecked husband who inherits a dog that, after drinking a mystery cocktail, he learns can actually talk back!

Pennies from Heaven
(1936)In this touching and heartwarming story, Larry Poole is a self-styled troubadour who befriends an orphaned girl and her grandfather.
Maisie Gets Her Man
(1942)
Blondie Takes a Vacation
(1939)The second film in the live-action version of the “Blondie” comic strip finds Blondie and Dagwood Bumstead trying to run a mountainside hotel!

Stagecoach
(1939)Western classic that transcends the genre as a stagecoach carrying nine passengers through frontier wilderness faces an impending Apache attack.

State Fair
(1945)A farming family attends the Iowa State Fair, two of the children meeting new flames, while the parents aim to win prizes for their produce.

My Little Chickadee
(1940)When a gold-digging singer, Flower Belle Lee, is kidnapped by a masked bandit, the town goes wild with speculation. When she returns unharmed, and is later seen kissing the bandit, she is tried by a judge and thrown out of town.

Air Raid Wardens
(1943)
Mark of the Vampire
(1935)In a remote village in Central Europe, a nobleman's body is founddrained of its blood and with two small punctures on the neck--the Markof the Vampire. An ancient terror, a horror that won't die, haunts thevillage: the long undead Count Mora (Lugosi) and his daughter, Luna(Carroll Borland), rule the night. But the vampires have not fed on thepeople of the village for a very long time. Now, with...
Babes on Broadway
(1941)Hullabaloo
(1940)Eager to make a name in radio, ex-vaudevillian Frank Merriweather (Frank Morgan) hits the airwaves by playing all the roles in a skit about Martian invaders. He plays the parts too well, raising panic in the streets and causing station brass to fire him. Hullabaloo's spoof of the Orson Welles' The War of the Worlds radio event is an antic highlight of this movie musical centered on merrily befogged Merriweather's attempt to restore his career – all while reuniting with his three children (from his three alimony-seeking ex-wives!). Joining Morgan for the fun is a mix of screen veterans (Billie Burke, Donald Meek), rising talents (Virginia Grey, Dan Dailey, Jr.) and specialty performers that include deadpan song stylist Virginia O'Brien and 31-year-old tenor Charles Holland as a singing bellhop. Holland would find operatic success in Europe and make his long-overdue debut at Carnegie Hall at the age of 73.