
Wednesday, August 27th TV listings for Turner Classic Movies Canada
Sadie McKee (1934)
A maid (Joan Crawford) has romances with a two-timer (Gene Raymond), a boozing millionaire and the master (Franchot Tone) of the house.
Susan and God (1940)
A socialite (Joan Crawford) annoys her husband (Fredric March) and friends with the new religion she brings home from England.
A Woman's Face (1941)
On trial for murder, a woman remembers the life she had before plastic surgery removed a terrible facial scar.
Above Suspicion (1943)
Honeymooners (Joan Crawford, Fred MacMurray) spy for the British in 1939 Germany to learn more about the Nazis' new magnetic mine.
The Damned Don't Cry (1950)
An oil-field worker's wife (Joan Crawford) climbs the social ladder as a public enemy's (David Brian) mink-draped mistress.
Goodbye, My Fancy (1951)
A newsman (Frank Lovejoy) confuses a congresswoman's (Joan Crawford) reunion with her old college boyfriend (Robert Young) at their alma mater.
Torch Song (1953)
A hardened Broadway comedy star (Joan Crawford) becomes attracted to a blind pianist (Michael Wilding).
The Story of Esther Costello (1957)
An American socialite's (Joan Crawford) husband (Rossano Brazzi) exploits her charity for an Irish girl (Heather Sears) who cannot see, hear or speak.
Harriet Craig (1950)
A businessman's (Wendell Corey) wife (Joan Crawford) is obsessed with running their household and his life, her way.
Humoresque (1946)
A married socialite (Joan Crawford) falls tragically in love with a classical violinist (John Garfield).
Possessed (1947)
An oilman's (Raymond Massey) bride (Joan Crawford) sees her ex-boyfriend (Van Heflin) romance her stepdaughter, and it drives her mad.
That's Entertainment! (1974)
Fred Astaire, Liza Minnelli, Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra, Elizabeth Taylor, Donald O'Connor, Debbie Reynolds, Mickey Rooney, James Stewart, Bing Crosby and Peter Lawford show clips from 1928-58 MGM musicals.
Sing You Sinners! (1938)
A dreamer (Bing Crosby) with a racehorse brings his mother and musical brothers (Fred MacMurray, Donald O'Connor) to Los Angeles for a long shot.