Vera Vague
Barbara Jo Allen
Vera Vague

Vera thinks she's witnessed a man decapitating his wife. Actually, she's only seen magician Bluebeard the Great rehearsing his act. Still convinced that the magician is a killer, Vera goes through all sorts of comic agony when she is forced to share the same train compartment with Bluebeard (who doesn't help matters when he offers her a sandwich consisting of "scrambled brains and tongue").
Vera Vague
Barbara Jo Allen
Vera Vague
Barton O'Hara aka Bluebeard the Great
Barton Yarborough
Barton O'Hara aka Bluebeard the Great
Train Passenger (uncredited)
Symona Boniface
Train Passenger (uncredited)
Policeman (uncredited)
Edmund Cobb
Policeman (uncredited)
Delivery Man (uncredited)
Heinie Conklin
Delivery Man (uncredited)
Policeman (uncredited)
Fred Kelsey
Policeman (uncredited)
Drunken Gardener (uncredited)
Emil Sitka
Drunken Gardener (uncredited)
Conductor (uncredited)
Victor Travis
Conductor (uncredited)
Policeman (uncredited)
John Tyrrell
Policeman (uncredited)
Minor Role (uncredited)
Johnny Kascier
Minor Role (uncredited)
To be fair to Barbara Jo Allen here, she gives it all she has got as she tries to squeeze just about every mishap and misunderstanding into twenty minutes of light slapstick comedy. She’s “Vera” who thinks she saw magician “Bluebeard” (Barton Yarborough) get up to something especially macabre. He tells her that he’s just practicing for his stage-show, but she’s sceptical - to put it mildly. That nervousness isn’t improved when the two have to share a railway carriage and the magician’s taste for ghoulish delicacies only heightens her fears! What let’s this down is the really lacklustre writing which doesn’t really sustain the joke after the first five minutes, and leaves the enthusiastic Miss Allen exposed - despite her genuinely decent efforts to keep this moving along amiably. It can’t have had much budget as the production itself isn’t up to much but that needn’t have mattered in the end if director Jules White had focussed a little more on keeping it better from the realms of stage-bound farce.
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