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Ira Einhorn was born in Philadelphia into a middle-class Jewish family. [2] [4] As a student at the University of Pennsylvania, where he received his undergraduate degree in English in 1961 before returning to complete some graduate work in the discipline in 1963, [5] [6] he became active in ecological groups and was part of the counterculture, anti-establishment, and anti-war movements of the ...
Skin is based on a real-life incident that occurred in Condit's life when she dated Ira Einhorn, also known as the Unicorn Killer. Ira had murdered his ex-girlfriend, Holly Maddux, and hidden her corpse in his closet. [1] Condit, who began dating Einhorn, never found Maddux's corpse due to being on medication that hindered her sense of smell. [2]
It is based on a real-life incident that occurred in Condit's life when she dated Ira Einhorn, also known as the Unicorn Killer. Ira had murdered his ex-girlfriend, Holly Maddux, and hidden her corpse in his closet. [7] Condit, who began dating Einhorn, never found Maddux's corpse due to being on medication that hindered her sense of smell. [8]
The Kid Stays in the Picture is a 1994 print autobiography by film producer Robert Evans.A film adaptation of the book was released in 2002. The title comes from a line attributed to studio head Darryl F. Zanuck, who was defending Evans after some of the actors involved in the film The Sun Also Rises (1957) had recommended he be removed from the cast.
Ira Einhorn (1940–2020), environmental and anti-war activist, convicted murderer, and speaker at first Earth Day event in Philadelphia; Mary Jane Fonder (1942–2018), convicted murderer of Rhonda Smith; Kermit Gosnell (born 1941), convicted of 21 felony counts of illegal late-term abortion; Gary Heidnik (1943–1999), convicted murderer
Anderson plays 1970s activist and purported Earth Day co-founder Ira Einhorn, who is charged with, and later convicted in absentia of, the murder of his girlfriend Holly Maddux (played by Watts). Skerritt plays Maddux's father, who tries to bring Einhorn to justice.
Kids Are People Too is an American television series that ran on Sunday mornings from 1978 to 1982 on ABC. [1] The series was a variety/news magazine show oriented toward kids, with the intention of recognizing them as people. [ 2 ]
David Strathairn as Ira Lowenstein, AAGPBL general manager Marvin Einhorn as Older Ira; Garry Marshall as Walter Harvey, candy bar mogul and AAGPBL founder (based on Philip K. Wrigley) Julie Croteau as Helen Haley on the field (baseball double for Anne Ramsay) Bill Pullman as Bob Hinson, Dottie's husband; Téa Leoni as Racine first base