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  1. Speedy is a 1928 American sound part-talkie comedy film starring comedian Harold Lloyd in the eponymous leading role. It was Lloyd's last silent film to be released theatrically. Due to the general public's apathy towards silent films, a sound version was prepared and released in the latter half of 1928.

  2. Chronically unemployed Yankees fan Harold "Speedy" Swift (Harold Lloyd) dates Jane Dillon (Ann Christy), a girl whose beloved grandfather, Pop (Bert Woodruff), runs a failing horse-drawn trolley...

    • (6)
    • Harold Lloyd
    • Ted Wilde
    • Comedy
    • Speedy (film)1
    • Speedy (film)2
    • Speedy (film)3
    • Speedy (film)4
    • Speedy (film)5
  3. www.imdb.com › title › tt0019412Speedy (1928) - IMDb

    Speedy: Directed by Ted Wilde. With Harold Lloyd, Ann Christy, Bert Woodruff, Babe Ruth. Harold "Speedy" Swift, a fan of Babe Ruth and the New York Yankees, saves from extinction the city's last horse-drawn trolley, operated by his girlfriend's grandfather.

    • (4.3K)
    • Action, Comedy, Family
    • Ted Wilde
    • 1928-05-04
  4. Apr 11, 2018 · Speedy is a 1928 American silent comedy film starring Harold Lloyd. The film stars famous comedian Harold Lloyd in the eponymous leading role. It was Lloyd's last silent film to be released in theatres.

  5. Speedy, directed in 1928 by comedy writer and filmmaker Ted Wilde, is a mile-a-minute ride through New York that was the final silent film to star Hollywood comic icon Harold Lloyd. Shot on location in New York and on sound stages in Los Angeles, the…

    • Harold “Speedy” Swift
    • Speedy (film)1
    • Speedy (film)2
    • Speedy (film)3
    • Speedy (film)4
    • Speedy (film)5
  6. Apr 20, 2022 · Speedy was the last silent feature to star Harold Lloyd—and one of his very best. The slapstick legend reprises his “Glasses Character,” this time as a good-natured but scatterbrained New Yorker who can’t keep a job.

  7. Starring Harold Lloyd, Ann Christy, Bert Woodruff. SPEEDY was the last silent feature to star Harold Lloyd—and one of his very best. The slapstick legend reprises his “Glasses Character,” this time as a good-natured but scatterbrained New Yorker who can’t keep a job.