Portia Nathan is an admissions officer at Princeton University. Her life takes a turn when she meets a college-bound student who may be the son she gave up for adoption. As Portia navigates her personal and professional crisis, she discovers the true meaning of family and love.
Madeline, a mentally ill teenage girl with a troubled relationship with her mother, finds solace in joining an experimental theater group. As she immerses herself in the world of role-playing and psychodrama, reality and fiction begin to blur.
Frankie, a terminally ill woman, gathers her family for a vacation in Sintra, Portugal. As they navigate their relationships and confront the realities of her illness, bonds are tested and new dynamics emerge.
The scene is set during the Second Empire. Captain Bitterlin watches jealously over his lovely daughter Madeleine but he cannot prevent nature from demanding its rights and Madeleine soon finds herself a suitor in the person of Mario, a dashing young songwriter. Bitterlin, who wishes his daughter to "evade the grip" of the young man, takes her away to Monte Carlo. There, the captain does what he had sworn he would never do, he gambles in a casino. And even more upsetting: Mario might well be hereabouts...
A 1967 pseudo-documentary film chronicling the travel experiences of The Young Americans choir. It was given an Academy Award in 1969, though it was revoked because it was released in 1967 and was thus ineligible, the only film in history to have done so.
Val and Ernie Stanton make up the comedy group for this Vitaphone short that was obviously capturing their vaudeville act.
Edgar is pressed into taking a singing lesson late at night - which leads to hijinks.
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