A more grown up Dorothy leaves the family's Kansas pig farm, and heads for Los Angeles just in time to get tossed into her next great adventure.
Type:
Feature
Status:
For sale
Page Count:
106pp
Genre:
Action, Adventure
Budget:
Independent
Age Rating:
Everyone
Synopsis/Details
Dorothy returns from her adventures in Oz having learned that she is as smart, courageous, and can accomplish as much as any man...more than most! Once back in Kansas she quickly realizes that she can’t stay on her family’s pig farm anymore. So the day she finishes school she heads to Los Angeles to begin her next great adventure. The first thing Dorothy does in L.A. is find a job at The Rainbow Detective Agency. She starts as a secretary, but her goal, which she lets the three other (male) detectives know, is to become the Rainbow Detective Agency's first female detective, the equal of all the others! The Rainbow Detective Agency is hired to handle security at The Academy Awards Presentation Dinner at the famous Roosevelt Hotel in Hollywood. At that time, a fairly routine, simple security assignment. That is until they discover there's a plot to kidnap Judy Garland during the ceremony. The mastermind behind the plot is a bitter, ageing former silent screen movie star, who hates "talkies" and new, so-called, actors and actress with their made-up names. The old star comes up with a plan to make certain that the Rainbow Detective Agency isn't available to prevent the kidnapping. It's only at the very last moment that thanks to Dorothy's and the others' courage and brains that the crime is foiled!

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This Script Is Loved By 2 Readers

Wilmer Villanueva's picture
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The Writer: M. E. Lee

I've been writing for a (relatively) long time. It's what I do. I don't act, I don't sing, I don't dance, I don't direct. I write. And if I am able to live the rest of my life writing I will be happy. If on top of that I can make a living by writing, I will be even happier...or so I believe...sincerely hope... I'm a strong believer in what Shakespeare wrote, "What's past is prologue." My schooling, my family, my jobs, my history in The Industry, that's all just prologue. What I write now is what counts. That's my bio. I wrote it. Go to bio
M. E. Lee's picture