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The Master of Disguise is a 2002 American adventure comedy film directed by production designer Perry Andelin Blake in his sole directorial effort, written by Dana Carvey and Harris Goldberg, and produced by Sid Ganis, Alex Siskin, Barry Bernardi, and Todd Garner.
In many forms of popular media, the use of a fake moustache as an unconvincing disguise is a commonly-used trope. [10] [11] The "disguised face" emoji (🥸) features a fake moustache, as well as a pair of glasses. [12] Drawn-on fake moustaches are deployed humorously in graffiti and other artistic means.
He is also a master of disguise. [17] His strongest persona, Man-E-Monster, was also his weakest, because as a monster he could initially be controlled by Beast Man. He enjoys playing the Eternian version of chess; Man-At-Arms built Roboto originally to serve as a gaming partner for Man-E-Faces.
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King Standish always remained in disguise, allowing no one to know what he looked like. His actual face and name are never revealed. He wore a tuxedo, an opera cape, a top hat and a domino mask, whenever making an appearance not in disguise. [3] His most frequent adversary was the Witch who rivaled his ability to disguise himself.
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“Real mustache, fake hair,” the Harry Potter star said on the Monday, March 21, episode of The View. “Anything to avoid fake facial hair. “Anything to avoid fake facial hair. Grow it if ...
Woman wearing a pair of Groucho glasses. Groucho glasses (also known as the beaglepuss [1]) are a humorous novelty disguise which function as a caricature of the stage makeup used by the comedian Groucho Marx in his movies and vaudeville performances.