Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Breakfast in Hollywood is a morning radio show created and hosted by Tom Breneman broadcast from 1941 to 1948 on three different radio networks: NBC, ABC and Mutual. These unscripted shows were spontaneous and involved much audience participation.
Breakfast in Hollywood, also known as The Mad Hatter, is a 1946 American comedy film directed by Harold D. Schuster and written by Earl Baldwin.The film stars Tom Breneman, Bonita Granville, Beulah Bondi, Edward Ryan, Raymond Walburn, Billie Burke, ZaSu Pitts, Hedda Hopper, Andy Russell, Spike Jones and Nat King Cole.
Tom Breneman's Restaurant is seen here as it looked in 1947. Breneman broadcast his Breakfast in Hollywood radio program from here in the late 1940s. Thomas Breneman Smith (June 18, 1900 – April 28, 1948) [1] [2] was an American radio personality. For most of his career, he was based in Southern California, in Los Angeles and Hollywood.
Breakfast Club; Breakfast at Sardi's; Breakfast in Hollywood; Brenda Curtis; Brenthouse; Bright Star (a.k.a. Irene Dunne and Fred MacMurray Show) The Brighter Day; Bring 'Em Back Alive; Bringing Up Father; Broadway Bandbox; Broadway Is My Beat; Broadway Talks Back (1946-1947) Brown Women in White [1]: 28 Brownstone Theater; Buck Rogers in the ...
Breakfast in America is the sixth studio album by the English rock band Supertramp, released on 16 March 1979, by A&M Records. [5] It was recorded in 1978 at The Village Recorder in Los Angeles. It spawned three US Billboard hit singles: " The Logical Song " (No. 6), " Goodbye Stranger " (No. 15), and " Take the Long Way Home " (No. 10).
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
English: Crooner Andy Russell sings "Magic is the Moonlight" / "Muñequita Linda" from the 1946 movie "Breakfast in Hollywood" Date: 23 June 2014, 12:52:26: Source:
Orangey (credited under various names) had a prolific career in film and television in the 1950s and early 1960s and was the only cat to win two PATSY Awards (Picture Animal Top Star of the Year, an animal actor's version of an Oscar), the first for the title role in Rhubarb (1951), [4] a story about a cat who inherits a fortune, and the second for his portrayal of "Cat" in Breakfast at ...