Comedy
Dagwood inadvertently gets cornered in to resigning. When his wife Blondie tries to ask Dagwoods boss Mr. Dithers for his job back, he ends up hiring her instead. This doesn't sit too well with Dagwood. Blondie's sister comes to visit, and Dagwood is put in a compromising situation with another woman.
Directed by
Frank R. Strayer
Grady Sutton
Camera Store Clerk (uncredited)
Don Beddoe
Marvin Williams
Sarah Edwards
Saleswoman (uncredited)
Irving Bacon
1st Mailman (uncredited)
Jonathan Hale
J.C. Dithars
Robert Sterling
Office Worker / Man Dancing with Millie (uncredited)
George Chandler
Laundryman (uncredited)
Jay Eaton
Wilson (uncredited)
Danny Mummert
Alvin Fuddle
Edgar Dearing
Officer McGuire (uncredited)
Edward Gargan
Garden Café Doorman (uncredited)
William B. Davidson
Elderly Man in Café (uncredited)
James Craig
(uncredited)
Penny Singleton
Blondie Bumstead
Walter Sande
2nd Mailman (uncredited)
Wallis Clark
Henry W. Philpot (uncredited)
Arthur Lake
Dagwood Bumstead
Lew Kelly
Mr. Crane (uncredited)
Eddie Acuff
Pots and Pans Peddler (uncredited)
Walter Soderling
Morgan (uncredited)
Larry Simms
Baby Bumstead
Sally Payne
Mrs. Williams (uncredited)
Stanley Brown
Ollie Shaw
David Newell
Sanders (uncredited)
Barbara Kent
Jitterbug Dancer (uncredited)
Inez Courtney
Betty Lou Wood
Virginia Dabney
Elderly Man's Companion (uncredited)
Dorothy Comingore
Francine Rogers
Richard Fiske
Nelson
Dorothy Moore
Dot Miller
Skinnay Ennis
Bandleader
Daisy
Daisy
Eugene Anderson Jr
Newsboy (uncredited)
Ralph Brooks
Nightclub Patron (uncredited)
Mary Jane Carey
Mary (uncredited)
Roy Damron
Jitterbug Dancer (uncredited)
Dick Durrell
Kirk (uncredited)
Wesley Giraud
Messenger Boy (uncredited)
Ray Hirsch
Jitterbug Dancer (uncredited)
Cammie King Conlon
Millie (uncredited)
Patti Lacey
Jitterbug Dancer (uncredited)
Maurice Max
Chick (uncredited)

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