
Enid Stamp-Taylor
Acting
Biography
No biography available for Enid Stamp-Taylor.
Born: June 12, 1904
Known For

Radio Pirates
Three unlikely people set up a pirate radio station in this musical comedy.

Keep Your Seats, Please
Despite being on his uppers, George is still prepared to pawn his beloved banjo in order to help his girlfriend save her niece from the orphanage. Help seems to be at hand when George is left a fortune by his old auntie, but unfortunately his inheritance is hidden inside a chair which has already been auctioned off! Can George and his chums track down his rightful due before his grasping solicitor (Alastair Sim, in an early film appearance) snatches the lot? It's hard to say, but he still finds time to perform both the title song and the classic 'When I'm Cleaning Windows'.

The Wicked Lady
A married woman finds new thrills as a masked robber on the highways.

O-Kay for Sound
Hyman Goldberger, the president of film studio Super-Colossal Pictures, is in trouble--his major backer is threatening to stop financing his pictures. He finds a group of six wealthy individuals who may want to become investors in the studio if his disgruntled backer pulls out. Unfortunately, his bumbling runner Albert picks that day to invite six of his street musician friends to be in the film that is currently shooting at the studio, and Hyman mistakes them for the potential investors. Complications ensue.

Climbing High
Wealthy Nicky finds himself engaged to gold-digger Lady Constance, but he really loves scatty model Diana. Complications, slapstick and mountaineering are the result.

House Broken
Two women plot to get rid of an unwelcome house guest.

South American George
To help out his exact double, George Formby (in a dual role) takes the place of a noted South American tenor. This way he can help the opera star fulfill contract obligations and also win the heart of the man's lovely press agent, Linden Travers.

Talking Feet
An east London fishmonger's young daughter (Hazel Ascot) is so grateful to Dr Hood (John Stuart) for saving her dog Patch after a road accident that she persuades her dad and various friends to help stage a concert at the local Hippodrome to raise money to save the local hospital.

Alibi
In 1930s France a bar hostess helps a man prove himself innocent of murder.

The Farmer's Wife
Eden Philpotts' "provincial" comic novel and play The Farmer's Wife was first filmed in the silent era by Alfred Hitchcock. The 1940 talkie version was directed by Leslie Arliss, son of stage star George Arliss. The story remained the same: A middle-aged widower attempts to select a wife from his rural district's eligible females (Basil Sydney). Three unsuccessful dalliances later, the farmer settles for his housekeeper, whom the audience has been rooting for all along. The Farmer's Wife is a prime example of the sort of fare that struck a proper chord with British filmgoers, but whose appeal would be lost to any other nationality.
Filmography
as Bertha (as Enid Stamp Taylor)
as Lady Henrietta Kingsclere
as Maritza
as Dany
as Nancy
as Frances Martinique
as Mary Hearne
as Tiny Fox-Collier
as Jacqueline
as Winnie
as Sylvia Shirley
as Jenny
as Cicely Burton
as Daphne Randall
as Jill Smith, secretary
as Cousin Carrie
as Yvonne
as Madame Louise
as Enid
as Pauline
as Marie Hopkins
as Elvira Whitman
as Lulu Marsac
as Gloria
as Betty
as Nellie Jackson
as Sarah