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Bobby Barbato is a pro ice hockey player in Chicago. As always, he expects cheering crowds and beautiful women coming after him. But one day, a gang of youths begin to mug him but he manages to fend them off and then catches the youngest member of the gang, Louis DeLeon.
1986: Source: Distributed by Touch and Go as a promo picture. Full original scan (with margins, Touch and Go logo, photographer credit) can be seen at an archived site at dementlieu.com ( (archived on May 17, 2008).) Author: Photograph by John Bohnen ("Spell it right, fucker"). Other versions
1986 A Fine Mess: Claudia Pazzo a.k.a. Blake Edwards' A Fine Mess (USA: complete title) 1986 Touch and Go: Denise DeLeon 1987 Il cugino americano: Caterina Ammirati a.k.a. Blood Ties (USA: TV title) 1987 Extreme Prejudice: Sarita Cisneros 1987 The Running Man: Amber Mendez 1988 Con el Corazón en la Mano: 1988 Colors: Louisa Gomez 1989 One of ...
Vestron Pictures Inc. was an American film studio and distributor, a former division of Austin O. Furst, Jr.'s Vestron Inc., that is best known for their 1987 release of Dirty Dancing. [ 1 ] Vestron also has had a genre film division, Lightning Pictures , a spin-off of Vestron's Lightning Video, headed by Lawrence Kasanoff , who would later go ...
The Meatmen made their recorded debut with the song "Meatmen Stomp", which appeared on the 1981 7-inch compilation EP Process of Elimination, released in 1981 on Touch and Go Records (an offshoot of Touch and Go fanzine, which Vee co-founded in 1979). [5] The band's first 7-inch EP, Blüd Sausage, was released in 1982 on Touch and Go. [6]
Joining SNL in 1986, Hooks arrived at a time when the show desperately needed a shot in the arm—and she delivered. With just the right amount of zing, she made audiences lean in and sometimes ...
Emerson, Lake & Powell is the only studio album by English progressive rock band Emerson, Lake & Powell, released on 2 June 1986 by Polydor Records. The album's debut single was "Touch and Go" which peaked at number 60 on the Billboard charts on 19 July 1986. [5] Cash Box called it a "thunderous, large scale rock drama." [6]
"Within the dance, I just became upset and I let go, and that's what happened. I think at the time people were concerned about the violent content of the piece, but it's easy to look at. It's simple."