Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Roberta Jymme Schourup (born April 7, 1943), better known as Roberta Shore, is a retired American actress and performer.She is notable for her roles in the original Shaggy Dog film and as Betsy Garth on the Western television series The Virginian.
(1955), Carousel (1956), and The Music Man (1962). She won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for playing a vengeful prostitute in Elmer Gantry (1960). She played the lead role of Shirley Partridge, the widowed mother of five children, in the musical situation-comedy television series The Partridge Family (1970–1974), which co ...
A picture published in the November 1966 issue of Ebony magazine [46] showed Nedra Talley singing lead, while Estelle and Elaine stood behind her singing harmony. In early 1967, after their tour with the Beatles ended, and "I Can Hear Music" failed to make an impact, the Ronettes left for a tour in West Germany , after which they agreed to ...
In July 2003, Clarke and Drury, along with two other The Virginian co-stars, Roberta Shore and singer Randy Boone, were guests at the Western Film Fair in Charlotte, North Carolina. [ 12 ] Clarke was a teenager when he married his first wife, Marilyn, and the couple had three boys within three years, Jeff, Dennis, and David. [ 4 ]
The Virginian is an American Western television series which ran from September 19, 1962 until March 24, 1971, with a total of 249 episodes across nine seasons. It aired on NBC in color and starred James Drury and Doug McClure. The Virginian was renamed The Men from Shiloh for its final season.
The original soundtrack to the 1952 film Singin' in the Rain was released by MGM Records in the same year in three formats: as a set of four 10-inch 78-rpm shellac records, as a set of four 7-inch EPs, and as a 10-inch long-play record. [2] [3] It contained songs performed by Gene Kelly, Donald O'Connor and Debbie Reynolds. [2]
Gene Kelly, Reynolds, and Donald O'Connor during the Singin' in the Rain trailer (1952) Her performance in the film greatly impressed the studio, which then gave her a co-starring role in what became her highest-profile film, Singin' in the Rain (1952), a satire on movie-making in Hollywood during the transition from silent to sound pictures. [17]
"Singing on Sunday" (Roy Botkin) "Paul's Ministry" (William Travel) "Too Far from God" (Johnny Wright, Jack Anglin, Clyde Baum) "Do You Expect a Reward from God" (Johnnie Bailes, Walter Bailes) "The Wings of a Dove" (Bob Ferguson) "The Footsteps of My Lord" (John D. Loudermilk) Side 2 "Wait a Little Longer Please Jesus" (Hazel Houser)