Dusty Fletcher

Nacimiento : 1900-07-07,

Muerte : 1954-03-15

PelĂ­culas

Boarding House Blues
Dusty
Tenants of a Harlem boarding house put on a show to save their home.
Killer Diller
Dusty (as Dusty 'Open the Door Richard' Fletcher)
An all-Black comedy and dance revue with stars of stage and screen.
Open the Door Richard
Dusty Fletcher
A musically themed film cutting back and forth between Dusty Fletcher at home in bed and a jazz band providing the film's swing music.
King for a Day
Dusty
A talented tap dancer who can't get an audition uses his prowess at playing craps to gain ownership of a musical show, making himself the star.
Rufus Jones for President
A fantasy satire on politics in which a little boy dreams that he becomes President of the U.S. and his 'mammy' is Vice President. The film spotlights two now legendary performers much earlier in their careers: Ethel Waters and Sammy Davis Jr. In his first screen appearance, around the age of seven, pint-sized Davis sings, dances and clowns. Nicknamed 'the beanpole' slim and slinky Waters looks far different from the heavier figure she displayed in Pinky (1949) and Member of the Wedding (1953). Statuesque in a long glamorous white gown, she sings her big hit "Am I Blue." Davis, in turn sings "I'll Be Glad When You're Dead You Rascal You." (Separate Cinema)