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  1. My Favorite Spy is a 1951 American comedy spy film directed by Norman Z. McLeod and starring Bob Hope, Hedy Lamarr and Francis L. Sullivan. It was produced and distributed by Paramount Pictures and forms the third of a loose trilogy featuring Hope including My Favorite Blonde and My Favorite Brunette .

  2. My Favorite Spy: Directed by Norman Z. McLeod. With Bob Hope, Hedy Lamarr, Francis L. Sullivan, Arnold Moss. A burlesque comic, who resembles an international spy, is recruited by the government and sent to Tangier to retrieve a sensitive microfilm before it's captured by hostile foreign agents.

    • (1.4K)
    • Comedy, Crime, Music
    • Norman Z. McLeod
    • 1951-12-25
  3. The perennial comic favorite Bob Hope springs to life in 1951's My Favorite Spy, a Paramount laugh-getter positioned at the midpoint of a film career that began with a catchy song in The Big Broadcast of 1938 and built to high popularity in the "Road" pictures with Bing Crosby.

  4. Comedian Peanuts White (Bob Hope) is certainly not a spy -- he just happens to look like one. Nabbed by FBI agents at an airport, he's mistaken for Eric Augustine (also Hope), an actual ...

    • (11)
    • Norman Z. Mcleod
    • Comedy
    • Bob Hope
  5. A burlesque comic doubles for a spy in Tangier and meets the spy's girlfriend, who is also a spy.

  6. A burlesque comic doubles for a spy in Tangier and meets the spy's girlfriend, who is also a spy. Starring Bob Hope Hedy Lamarr Francis L. Sullivan. Director Norman Z. McLeod. Movie Details...

  7. Peanuts White, a burlesque comic, is recruited by U.S. agents to impersonate international spy Eric Augustine (whom White resembles) in a mission to purchase a million-dollar microfilm in mysterious, exotic Tangier.