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Ella Wallace Raines (August 6, 1920 [1] – May 30, 1988) was an American film and television actress active from the early 1940s through the mid-1950s. Described as "sultry" and "mysterious", the green-eyed star [2] appeared frequently in crime pictures and film noir, but also in drama, comedy, Westerns, thrillers, and romance.
Tone and Ella Raines in Phantom Lady (1944); an early noir and villainous role for him Janis Carter, Janet Blair and Tone in I Love Trouble (1948) Tone signed a contract with Universal, starring in his first Western there, Trail of the Vigilantes (1940), where he more than earns his spurs alongside the likes of Broderick Crawford and Andy ...
Robin Olds and Ella Raines separated in 1975 and divorced in 1976. Robin married Abigail Morgan Sellers Barnett in January 1978, and they divorced after fifteen years of marriage. [111] In his retirement at Steamboat Springs, Colorado, Olds pursued his love of skiing and served on the city's planning commission. He was active in public speaking ...
The Strange Affair of Uncle Harry, also known as Uncle Harry and The Zero Murder Case, is a 1945 American film noir [2] directed by Robert Siodmak and starring George Sanders, Geraldine Fitzgerald and Ella Raines. [1] It is based on the stage play Uncle Harry by Thomas Job, [1] which was first performed in 1938. [3]
A Dangerous Profession is a 1949 American film noir directed by Ted Tetzlaff, written by Warren Duff and Martin Rackin, and starring George Raft, Ella Raines and Pat O'Brien. [2] [3] The film was one of a series of thrillers in which Raft appeared in the late 1940s, with decreasing commercial results. [4]
Phantom Lady is a 1944 American film noir directed by Robert Siodmak and starring Franchot Tone, Ella Raines, and Alan Curtis. [1] [2] Based on the novel of the same name by Cornell Woolrich, [1] [2] it follows a young Manhattan secretary and her endeavors to prove that her boss did not murder his wife.
Jaleel White is looking back on the emotional death of his former co-star Jonathan Brandis in his new memoir "Growing Up Urkel."
The Walking Hills is a 1949 American Western film directed by John Sturges and starring Randolph Scott and Ella Raines.The film's plot has film noir elements in its story of a search for an old treasure by nine men including a detective tracking a fugitive, several others who have things to hide, and a love triangle involving the two leads and the fugitive.