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Mari Aldon was born in Tauragė, Lithuania. Her father Antanas Paulius was a policeman, mother Antanina (Antosė) Paulienė was a nurse. Father moved to America looking for a job. Soon after, when Mari was three years old, her mother also moved to Toronto, Canada with her daughter. [3] There, she attended Givens Public School and Central High ...
[70] [71] [6] Garnett then married 24-year-old Mari Aldon in London, England, on 13 August 1953. Their daughter Tiela Aldon Garnett was born in Los Angeles, USA on 25 October 1955. [72] [6] [73] Garnett died of leukemia at the Wadsworth Veterans Administration Hospital in Sawtelle, California, USA at the age of 83.
Mari Aldon and Richard Webb at the Castillo de San Marcos for the movie premiere.. During the Second Seminole War in 1840, US Army General Zachary Taylor sends naval Lieutenant Tufts and scout Monk to a remote Florida island home, where the reclusive Captain Quincy Wyatt lives with his 5-year-old son.
Richard Webb with Mari Aldon at the Florida premiere of Distant Drums (1951) In 1951, Webb was contracted to Warner Bros where he played in I Was a Communist for the FBI then appeared along with Gary Cooper in the "Florida Western" Distant Drums. In 1957, Webb played Ben Maxwell in the episode "The Long Hunt" of the TV series Maverick.
Mask of Dust is a 1954 British second feature [1] motor racing drama film directed by Terence Fisher and starring Richard Conte, Mari Aldon and Peter Illing. [2] It was written by Paul Tabori and Richard H. Landau based on the 1953 novel The Last Race by Jon Manchip White. It was released in the United States by Lippert Pictures as A Race for Life.
Mari Aldon Arthur Hunnicutt: United States: Technicolor [100] 1952 High Noon: Will Kane Fred Zinneman: Grace Kelly Katy Jurado Lloyd Bridges Lon Chaney Jr. Stanley Kramer: ♦ Academy Award for Best Actor [101] ♦ Golden Globe Award for Best Actor [77] ♦ Photoplay Award for Most Popular Male Star [77] [102] Springfield Rifle: Major Alex ...
The fifth episode of Colgate Theatre, "The Fountain of Youth," won a Peabody Award in 1958 for Orson Welles, [1] [6] who wrote, directed, narrated, arranged the music for, and designed the sets for it.
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