Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
All of the stories in Series 1 were originally written by the Rev. W. Awdry, including a one-off story commissioned by the staff: Thomas' Christmas Party.The seven engines introduced in this series became the core of the cast in later episodes, with crew member (and from Series 8–12, director) Steve Asquith terming them the "Magnificent Seven". [1]
It was not until April 2006 that the complete series was released on DVD by Paramount Home Entertainment. Good Grief (August 8, 2014) Lifetime had announced plans to debut the reality television series, which would have followed the owners of the Johnson Family Mortuary funeral home in Fort Worth, Texas, and began airing promotions for the ...
The television version was released on the season 1 DVD set, and as part of "The Complete Epic Series" boxset containing all episodes of the series. The theatrical version was released in 1999 and then again in 2003 as a "flipper" disc with a preview for the then-current Battlestar Galactica revival and a Cylon DVD game. These releases present ...
This DVD set contains 1 disc. The Complete Third Series: 12 1987 28 May 2007 [5] Includes episodes 1-12 of series three. This DVD set contains 3 discs. The Complete Series 1 – 3: 36 1984–1987 19 November 2007 [6] Also includes the pilot episode of the series, Woodentop. This DVD set contains 10 discs. The Bill: Volume 1: 13 1988 30 June ...
Special features: "Danger Mouse and Friends" (exclusive to this DVD collection and never previously available), Pilot Episode "The Mystery of The Lost Chord", Interviews with Brian Cosgrove and Mark Hall, Exclusive behind-the-scenes footage, Danger Mouse games, Original theme tune ideas, Biographies, Stills galleries, 4 artcards (HMV exclusive ...
The show originated as a 1983 pilot called Party Line, hosted by Gene Rayburn. The show was picked up with a few minor changes, mainly Forsyth replacing Rayburn as host and the show title changed. Reg Grundy Productions produced Bruce Forsyth's Hot Streak, which was the first daytime series the Grundy company produced for a network other than NBC.
Phineas Bogg (Jon-Erik Hexum) is one of a society of time travelers called Voyagers, who with the help of a young boy named Jeffrey Jones (played by Meeno Peluce) from 1982, uses a hand-held device called an Omni (which looks like a large pocket watch) that flashes red when history is wrong and green when the timeline is corrected, to travel in time and ensure that history unfolds correctly.
At Ease is an American sitcom starring Jimmie Walker that aired for 14 episodes on ABC from March 4 to June 10, 1983, with reruns continuing until July 15, 1983. [ 1 ] Synopsis