Ray Bolger is a Actor American born on 10 january 1904 at Massachusetts (USA)
Ray Bolger
Ray Bolger participated to
21 films (as actor, director or script writer).
Among those,
2 have good markets following the box office.
Here are the best films classified by number of entries :
Actor
, 1h38
Directed by Mervyn LeRoy,
George Cukor,
Victor Fleming,
Norman Taurog,
Richard Thorpe,
King VidorOrigin USAGenres Science fiction,
Musical theatre,
Fantasy,
Adventure,
MusicalThemes Films about magic and magicians,
Monde imaginaire,
Films about music and musicians,
Le pays d'Oz,
Witches in film,
Musical films,
Steampunk films,
Children's filmsActors Judy Garland,
Frank Morgan,
Ray Bolger,
Bert Lahr,
Jack Haley,
Billie BurkeRoles "Hunk" / Scarecrow
Rating80%
The film starts in sepia toned Kansas in the early 1900s. Dorothy Gale lives with her dog Toto on the farm of her Aunt Em and Uncle Henry. Dorothy and Toto get in trouble with a ruthless neighbor, Miss Almira Gulch, when Toto bites her. However, Dorothy's family and the farmhands are all too busy to pay attention to her. Miss Gulch arrives with permission from the sheriff to have Toto euthanized. He is taken away, but escapes and returns to Dorothy; she then decides to run away from home with Toto to escape Miss Gulch. , 1h42
Directed by George Sidney,
Robert AltonOrigin USAGenres Drama,
Comedy,
Romantic comedy,
Musical,
Romance,
WesternThemes Films about music and musicians,
Transport films,
Rail transport films,
Musical filmsActors Judy Garland,
John Hodiak,
Ray Bolger,
Angela Lansbury,
Preston Foster,
Virginia O'BrienRoles Chris Maule
Rating69%
In the 1890s, a group of "Harvey Girls" - new waitresses for Fred Harvey's pioneering chain of Harvey House restaurants - travels on the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway (AT&SF) to the western town of Sandrock, Arizona. On the trip they meet Susan Bradley (Judy Garland), who travels to the same town to marry the man whose beautiful letters she received when she answered a "lonely-hearts" ad. Unfortunately, when she arrives, the man turns out to be an "old coot" who does not at all meet her expectations – and he also wants not to get married as much as she wants not to marry him, so they agree to call it off. When she learns that someone else, the owner of the local saloon, Ned Trent (John Hodiak), wrote the letters as a joke, she confronts him and tells him off, in the process endearing herself to him.