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The April 20, 1966 episode of The Danny Thomas Show, titled "The Road to Lebanon," featured Bing Crosby scouting locations in Beirut for a new Road picture without Bob Hope. [11] In the 1981 Mel Brooks film History of the World, Part I, on escaping from the Romans, Brooks and co-star Gregory Hines parody the series' "We're off on the road to ...
Road to Rio is a 1947 American musical comedy film directed by Norman Z. McLeod and starring Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, and Dorothy Lamour. [4] Written by Edmund Beloin and Jack Rose, the film is about two inept vaudevillians who stow away on a Brazilian-bound ocean liner.
The Seven Little Foys is a Technicolor in VistaVision 1955 biographical musical comedy-drama film directed by Melville Shavelson starring Bob Hope as Eddie Foy.One highlight of the film is an energetic tabletop dance showdown sequence with Bob Hope as Eddie Foy and James Cagney as George M. Cohan (reprising his role from Yankee Doodle Dandy).
Joyce Arden (Bette Davis), temperamental actress, frequent co-star and fiancée of Basil Underwood – It's Love I'm After; Mavis Arden , glamorous movie star, "the talk of the talkies", stranded in rural Pennsylvania while promoting her latest film, Superfine Pictures' Drifting Lady – Go West, Young Man
"Here’s to bringing a fun movie that’ll make all you fans happy hopefully!" Fans were equally thrilled to see Lacey and Brennan on-screen once again, and they didn't hold back their elation ...
Newhart appeared on six episodes of The Big Bang Theory -- which brought him his first Emmy in 2013 for guest acting -- and his co-star, Kaley Cuoco, took to her Instagram Story to remember the ...
The actress said she often stops by his grave to "check on things" and lay flowers, she told fellow 'Full House' alum Dave Coulier
Never Say Die is a 1939 American romantic comedy film starring Martha Raye and Bob Hope.Based on a play of the same title by William H. Post and William Collier Sr., [1] which ran on Broadway for 151 performances in 1912, [2] the film was directed by Elliott Nugent and written for the screen by Dan Hartman, Frank Butler and Preston Sturges.