Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The film was announced in November 1939 with the lead roles allocated to Adolphe Menjou and Maureen O'Hara. O'Hara had just moved to Hollywood with Charles Laughton and appeared in The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Producer Robert Sisk and director John Farrow had made a number of films together, including the popular Five Came Back (1939). [1]
Maureen Elizabeth Reagan (January 4, 1941 – August 8, 2001) was an American political activist and the first child of U.S. president Ronald Reagan and his first wife, actress Jane Wyman. [2] Her brother is Michael Reagan and her half-siblings are Patti Davis and Ron Reagan , from her father's second marriage (to Nancy Reagan ).
Interiors is a 1978 American drama film written and directed by Woody Allen.It stars Kristin Griffith, Mary Beth Hurt, Richard Jordan, Diane Keaton, E. G. Marshall, Geraldine Page, Maureen Stapleton, and Sam Waterston.
The Parent Trap is a 1961 American romantic comedy film written and directed by David Swift. [1] [2] It stars Hayley Mills (in a dual role) as a pair of teenage twins plotting to reunite their divorced parents by switching places with each other.
How Green Was My Valley is a 1941 American drama film directed by John Ford, adapted by Philip Dunne from the 1939 novel of the same title by Richard Llewellyn.It stars Walter Pidgeon, Maureen O'Hara, Anna Lee, Donald Crisp, and a young Roddy McDowall.
Maureen Denise McCormick (born August 5, 1956) is an American actress. She portrayed Marcia Brady on the ABC television sitcom The Brady Bunch, which ran from 1969 to 1974, and reprised the role in several of the numerous Brady Bunch spin-offs and films, including The Brady Kids, The Brady Bunch Hour, The Brady Brides and A Very Brady Christmas (1988).
Maureen O'Hara from The Black Swan (1942) Maureen O’Hara from Photoplay magazine (1942) Lobby poster from Miracle on 34th Street – Maureen O'Hara and John Payne in the foreground, Natalie Wood and Edmund Gwenn in background (1947) Fred MacMurray and Maureen O'Hara in Father Was a Fullback (1949) John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara in The Quiet Man (1952) Lobby poster from The Redhead from ...
The first person he tells is Dutch Heinemann, the owner of the hunting and fishing store, whose affair with Naomi was part of the reason she left. When she gets to her family's home, Naomi is greeted enthusiastically by Lily, but her eldest daughter Joyce, who has taken on the role of running the household, is bitter about her mother's long ...