Wednesday, December 24th TV listings for Movies! (KPVI-DT3) Pocatello, ID
Stowaway (1936)
An orphan (Shirley Temple) attaches herself to an American playboy (Robert Young) and his sweetheart (Alice Faye) in Shanghai.
Bright Eyes (1934)
A millionaire, his niece (Judith Allen) and a pilot (James Dunn) love a little orphan (Shirley Temple) who sings "On the Good Ship Lollipop."
Heidi (1937)
An aunt takes a Swiss orphan (Shirley Temple) from the girl's grandfather (Jean Hersholt) in the Swiss Alps and puts her to work in Frankfurt as companion to a disabled child.
Wee Willie Winkie (1937)
An American girl (Shirley Temple) charms hostile natives and a Highland soldier (Victor McLaglen) in colonial India.
The Little Princess (1939)
A poor but proud girl searches army hospitals for her father, reported dead in the Boer War. With her father missing in action, the Victorian child is sent to a harsh boarding school. She escapes the school to find her father.
Susannah of the Mounties (1939)
A Mountie (Randolph Scott) and his sweetheart (Margaret Lockwood) adopt a little girl (Shirley Temple) orphaned by an Indian attack.
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1938)
After Rebecca is mistakenly rejected at an audition for a radio advertising campaign, her stepfather takes her upstate.
Captain January (1936)
An orphan (Shirley Temple) lives with a lighthouse keeper (Guy Kibbee) until a truant officer takes her away.
Curly Top (1935)
A Park Avenue millionaire (John Boles) adopts a frisky orphan (Shirley Temple) and her teenage sister (Rochelle Hudson).
The Blue Bird (1940)
A naughty little girl (Shirley Temple) dreams she and her brother are sent by a fairy to find the bluebird of happiness.
The Robe (1953)
The red robe worn by Christ links a Roman tribune (Richard Burton), his Christian lover (Jean Simmons) and a Greek slave (Victor Mature).
The Great Rupert (1950)
Rupert, a dancing squirrel, is left to fend for himself on the streets after his master turns bankrupt; unsuited for the hard life, Rupert devises a scheme to raise his master's family from poverty.
O. Henry's Full House (1952)
Soapy believes that getting arrested and thrown into a warm jail cell is the best solution to being homeless in cold weather; fugitives Sam and Bill kidnap a child for a ransom; Della and Jim seek to buy each other Christmas gifts.
