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  1. Dimples Appleby lives with her pick-pocket grandfather in 19th century New York City. She entertains the crowds while he works his racket. A rich lady makes it possible for the girl to go legit.

  2. Box office. $1 million [2] Stowaway is a 1936 American musical drama film directed by William A. Seiter. The screenplay by William M. Conselman, Nat Perrin, and Arthur Sheekman is based on a story by Samuel G. Engel. The film is about a young orphan called "Ching Ching" ( Shirley Temple) who meets wealthy playboy Tommy Randall ( Robert Young ...

  3. Dimples is a film directed by William A. Seiter with Shirley Temple, Frank Morgan, Robert Kent, Helen Westley .... Year: 1936. Original title: Dimples. Synopsis: Dimples is a busker - a street entertainer, and lives in mid-19th century New York City's Bowery with her kindhearted but pickpocketing Grandfather, Prof. Eustace Appleby.

  4. When a society lady adopts her, Dimples is discovered by the woman’s nephew who needs someone to play Little Eva in his upcoming production of ‘Uncle Tom’s cabin’. Charming and entertaining, this film is packed with laughs, tender moments and rousing musical numbers. This is a colourized version of the original black and white film.

  5. Dimples. A 1936 period musical film directed by William A. Seiter, starring Shirley Temple and Frank Morgan. The place is New York City. The time is the years leading up to The American Civil War. Sylvia "Dimples" Appleby (Temple) lives with her eccentric grandfather, "The Professor" (Morgan). Supposedly a music teacher, the Professor's actual ...

  6. www.rottentomatoes.com › m › 1005868-dimplesDimples | Rotten Tomatoes

    In 1850s New York, precocious child street performer Dimples Appleby (Shirley Temple) lives with her poverty-stricken actor grandfather, Eustace Appleby (Frank Morgan), who hides the fact that he ...

    • Musical
  7. Musically, this film features some familiar Stephen Foster tunes as well as Negro spirituals, especially when Dimples is cast in a stage production of Uncle Tom's Cabin. Though her dance routines (especially with two guys billed as "The Two Black Dots") show the clever choreography of the great Bill Robinson, the remaining songs are less than great.