The 13th Man
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The 13th Man

Year:
Duration:
70 min
Genres:
Mystery
IMDB rate:
5.9
Director:
William Nigh
Details
Country: USA
Release Date: 1937-06-30
Cast
Actor
Character
Weldon Heyburn
A. 'Swifty' Taylor
Inez Courtney
Julie Walters (Swifty's secretary)
Selmer Jackson
Andrew Baldwin ('Globe Times' publisher)
Matty Fain
Louis Cristy (nightclub owner)
Milburn Stone
Jimmy Moran ('Globe Times' reporter)
Grace Durkin
Alice Moran (Baldwin's secretary)
Robert Homans
Police Lt. Tom O'Hara
Eadie Adams
Stella Leroy (nightclub singer)
Sidney Payne
'Legs' Henderson (fighter)
Dewey Robinson
Romeo Casanova (radio singer / gym operator)
William Gould
Dist. Atty. Robert E. Sutherland
Warner Richmond
George Crandall the Bookie
Eddie Gribbon
Iron Man' (Swiftys bodyguard)
Don Beddoe
District Attorney's Aide (uncredited)
Terry Conlin
KGT Radio Announcer (uncredited)
Sidney D'Albrook
Dr. Randolph Gorman (uncredited)
John Dilson
Henry L. Martin (uncredited)
Lester Dorr
Police Lab Man Dave Elliott (uncredited)
Adabelle Driver
Mrs. Bryant (uncredited)
Eddie Fetherston
Henchman Gus (uncredited)
Robert Kent
Jack Winslow (uncredited)
Lafe McKee
Night Watchman at Sutherland's Office (uncredited)
Jack Mower
Policeman (uncredited)
Henry Otto
One Punch (uncredited)
Jack Perrin
Policeman (uncredited)
Ruth Robinson
Mrs. Walters (uncredited)
Dan Wolheim
Henchman Al (uncredited)
Bert Young
Mug (uncredited)
Did you know?
Trivia
The first picture released by the reformed Monogram Pictures Corporation, which was temporarily shelved from 1935-37 when its two owners, Trem Carr and W. Ray Johnston, joined with Mascot Pictures' Nat Levine and another independent studio, Liberty Pictures, to form Republic Pictures with Herbert J. Yates (owner of Consolidated Film Industries, a film processing laboratory) at the old Mack Sennett studio. The partnership held for a year until Carr and Johnston, chafing under the autocratic rule of Yates, left the company in 1937 and reformed Monogram. This is the first of a remarkable 20 features the studio would release that year. Monogram would always remain a low-budget outfit, its product geared for rural audiences and second-run theaters. In 1952 it changed its name to Allied Artists, hoping to erase the low-budget "stigma" associated with Monogram.
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Photos from cast
Bobby Barber
Drawing of a school classroom creativity in the classroom clipart Class play with playdough clipart