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  1. An ex-con and a child violinist get caught up in Annie's scheme to discredit her tugboat rival, Capt. Bullwinkle. Director Phil Rosen Genre Adventure Original Language English Runtime 1h 0m

    • Adventure
  2. Now-widowed Tugboat Annie, tugboat queen of the Northwest, struggles to save her job against the competition of rival Captain Bullwinkle. Menu. Movies. Release Calendar Top 250 Movies Most Popular Movies Browse Movies by Genre Top Box Office Showtimes & T ...

    • 3 Min.
  3. The Adventures of Tugboat Annie is a 1957 Canadian-filmed television series starring Minerva Urecal as Annie Brennan, the role originated by Marie Dressler in the 1933 screen classic Tugboat Annie. Urecal was the fourth actress to portray Tugboat Annie; the others were Dressler, Marjorie Rambeau in Tugboat Annie Sails Again, and Jane Darwell in Captain Tugboat Annie. Norman Reilly Raine's ...

  4. Captain Tugboat Annie is a 1945 second sequel to the classic Tugboat Annie, this time starring Jane Darwell as Annie and Edgar Kennedy as Horatio Bullwinkle. The film was directed by Phil Rosen, and is also known as Tugboat Annie's Son. The original film starred Marie Dressler, Wallace Beery, Robert Young, and Maureen O'Sullivan. The first sequel, called Tugboat Annie Sails Again, was released ...

  5. The film was directed by Phil Rosen, and is also known as Tugboat Annie's Son. Captain Tugboat Annie is a 1945 second sequel to the classic Tugboat Annie (1933), this time starring Jane Darwell as Annie and Edgar Kennedy as Horatio Bullwinkle.

  6. Marjorie Rambeau sure had some big boots to fill. Her rare lead performance is more a thing of curiosity than a success. She completely transform herself from her usual Hollywood performances and becomes a total grotesque. So grotesque she doesn't fit the world the rest of the characters in this movie live in, except perhaps her rival Alan Hale.

  7. Norman Reilly Raine’s stories of the salty tugboat captain Annie Brennan, a character based on the life of Thea Foss, first appeared in prose form in the weekly US journal Saturday Evening Post in the late 1920s. She was soon developed into a movie character, depicted in three films, portrayed by a different actress in each.