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  1. Maisie Was a Lady (1941) was the fourth in MGM's "B" film series about the adventures of Maisie Ravier (Ann Sothern), a brassy Brooklyn-born showgirl with a heart of gold. This time, a drunken scion of a rich society family (Lew Ayres) gets Maisie fired from her carnival job, and hires her to work as a maid at his family's mansion.

  2. Released January 10th, 1941, 'Maisie Was a Lady' stars Ann Sothern, Lew Ayres, Maureen O'Sullivan, C. Aubrey Smith The NR movie has a runtime of about 1 hr 19 min, and received a user score of 68 ...

  3. Up Goes Maisie (1946) Undercover Maisie (1947) Radio. On November 24, 1941, Sothern appeared in the Lux Radio Theater adaptation of Maisie Was a Lady, and the popularity of the film series led to her own radio program, The Adventures of Maisie, broadcast on CBS Radio from 1945 to 1947, on the Mutual Broadcasting System in 1952, and in ...

  4. Delivering to Lebanon 66952 Choose location for most accurate options Movies & TV. Select the department you want to search in

  5. 11 de feb. de 2021 · 1 134 727 просмотров. After losing her job and ending up in jail due to the drunken antics of wealthy Bob Rawlston (Lew Ayres), performer Maisie Ravier (Ann Sothern) is relieved when the judge sentences Bob to employ her for two months. Bob takes Maisie to his estate, where the butler, Walpole (C. Aubrey Smith), instructs her on being ...

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  6. Maisie Was a Lady. After losing her job and ending up in jail due to the drunken antics of wealthy Bob Rawlston (Lew Ayres), performer Maisie Ravier (Ann Sothern) is relieved when the judge sentences Bob to employ her for two months. Bob takes Maisie to his estate, where the butler, Walpole (C. Aubrey Smith), instructs her on being a maid.

  7. Maisie (1939) -- (Movie Clip) The Chiffon Girl The first scene in the first picture in the series of ten from MGM, Ann Sothern is the title character, getting bad news (from Frank Darien as Pops) about her showbiz gig in Big Horn, Wyoming, from a script first written for Jean Harlow, opening Maisie, 1939, co-starring Robert Young.