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Veteran television producer Norman Lear, who was Harold Lear's cousin, produced the film, initially offering the lead role to Paul Newman in anticipation of a theatrical release. Uneasy about the prospect of portraying an infirm and moribund character, Newman declined to participate. [ 1 ]
Norman 2008 Deception: Lawyer #1 Puppy Love: Gary 2009 Peter and Vandy: Dad Bride Wars: Simmons The Skeptic: Dr. Warren Koven Solitary Man: Dr. Steinberg It's Complicated: Ted 2010 Morning Glory: NBC Executive 2012 Game Change: Fred Davis III: Arbitrage: Chris Vogler 2013 Kilimanjaro: Milton Delivery Man: Mass Action Attorney 2014 Rob the Mob ...
Vogler's not normally one for pictures, she said, but on this day was compelled to ask for one. She went to put her arm around Goldin — who had the a ring behind his back, right where Vogler ...
The dedicated medical staff at a Duquesne women's basketball game sprang into action last month to save Ed Wesolowski, a father of three, after he suffered a widow-maker heart attack and collapsed ...
Norman René (1951–1996) American film director and producer [137] Marlon Riggs (1957–1994) American author and documentary filmmaker [138] Max Robinson (1939–1988) American journalist; was the first African American network news anchor for ABC World News Tonight. [139] Anthony Sabatino (1944–1993)
Dr. Jeremy Engel, a family practitioner with St. Elizabeth who has become an outspoken advocate for a medical response to the heroin epidemic, said there is a good reason for the slow pace. His months-long effort to recruit doctors for the proposed clinic has been met with reluctance from his fellow physicians.
Two widely touted Alzheimer’s drugs have been shown to enable patients to remain in their homes for longer periods of time. Those medications, however, are not without their risks and side effects.
In 1934 Dr. Wolff married the well-known painter Isabel Bishop, and had a son, Remsen N. Wolff. In 1958 he was named the first occupant of the “Anne Parrish Titzel Chair” in Medicine at the Cornell University Medical College. Harold Wolff died on February 21, 1962, in Washington D.C., of a cerebral vascular disease. [12]