Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Marlowe (center) as Ellery Queen with Santos Ortega and Marian Shockley in The Adventures of Ellery Queen, 1939 Hugh Marlowe (born Hugh Herbert Hipple ; January 30, 1911 – May 2, 1982) was an American film, television, stage, and radio actor.
After composer Bob Masen (Hugh Marlowe), who is Miss Potts's neighbor and landlord, tells the sisters that the hill is owned by Luigi Rossi of New York, the sisters visit the local Catholic Bishop to seek his support for their planned project. He is unable to help them with their project, but does give them a small amount of money to tide them ...
Heaven Sword & Dragon Sabre based on the book of the same title; Hero based on the film of the same title; King of Fighters based on the game King of Fighters; Return of the Condor Heroes (Legendary Couple) based on the book of the same title; Weapon of the Gods; Digimon: Digital Monsters
In 2020 Carlsen Verlag published the children's book Ein Corona-Regenbogen fuer Anna und Moritz (A Corona Rainbow for Anna and Moritz). In the book the grade-schooler brings up the topic of the COVID-19 pandemic, saying: "The virus comes from China and it has spread around the entire world." At the start of March 2021, the Chinese consulate ...
Marlowe trails Mayfield to the small coastal resort town of Esmeralda, California. During her train ride west, Mayfield had been recognized by a man who then tried to blackmail her, for reasons disclosed at the end of the story. While Marlowe is poking around Esmeralda, the blackmailer is found dead on the balcony of Mayfield's hotel room.
Bugles in the Afternoon is a 1952 American Western film produced by William Cagney, directed by Roy Rowland and starring Ray Milland, Helena Carter, Hugh Marlowe and Forrest Tucker, based on the 1943 novel by Ernest Haycox. [2] The story features the Battle of the Little Big Horn. [3]
Hugh Marlowe, Gary Merrill, Millard Mitchell, and Dean Jagger also appear in supporting roles. The film was nominated for four Academy Awards and won two: Dean Jagger for Best Actor in a Supporting Role , and Thomas T. Moulton for Best Sound Recording . [ 3 ]
Published by Simon & Schuster, the book is a collection of Carlson's essays, spanning several decades. The publisher says The Long Slide "delivers a few of his favorite pieces—annotated with new commentary and insight—to memorialize the tolerance and diversity of thought that the media used to celebrate instead of punish."