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Robert L. Johnson at The Interviews: An Oral History of Television; Appearances on C-SPAN; How I Built This - Live Episode! Black Entertainment Television: Robert Johnson; Interview with Robert Johnson, president and founder of BET, from KUT's In Black America series on the American Archive of Public Broadcasting, April 29, 1986
Kidnapped, also known as The Adventures of David Balfour, was a 1978 TV miniseries, based on Robert Louis Stevenson's novel Kidnapped, with some elements taken from his novel Catriona. It was a French - West German co-production. [ 1 ]
Robert Charles Epp (born December 15, 1926) [1] is a translator of Japanese literature into English. Among others, he has translated the poetry of Hagiwara Sakutarō , Maruyama Kaoru , Tachihara Michizō , and Daisaku Ikeda .
[5] Another source of inspiration was watching Louis Johnson, a young black dancer, and a female student rehearsing the adagio from Swan Lake while watching themselves in the mirror, and as Robbins described, he "was struck by the way they were watching that couple over there doing a love dance and totally unaware of the proximity and possible ...
240-Robert: English 1979–1981 2 seasons, 16 episodes Rosner Television Filmways. The series title is a reference to the call-sign designation for the LASD's search and rescue paramedic teams. Produced in the US. Stars Mark Harmon. 3rd Degree: English 2000-May 2013 e.tv: Local investigative journalism.
Tusitala is a 1986 three-part mini series for television based on the last years in the life of Robert Louis Stevenson, when he left Great Britain for Sydney and west Samoa. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Samoa Connection
[5] Scottish novelists Robert Louis Stevenson (author of Treasure Island) and J. M. Barrie (author of Peter Pan featuring Captain Hook) both identified Johnson's General History of the Pyrates as one of their major influences, and Stevenson even borrowed one character's name (Israel Hands) from a list of Blackbeard's crew which appeared in ...
The Great Illustrated Classics book series offers easy-to-read adaptations of well known literary classics, featuring large print and illustrations on every other page. The series is targeted at children. There are currently 66 titles. [1] [2] The series is owned, published, and sold by Waldman Publishing Corporation under the Baronet Books ...