Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Kari Samantha Wuhrer (born April 28, 1967) [1] is an American former actress, model, and singer. She is known for her time as hostess of the MTV game show Remote Control (1988–1989), her portrayals of Abigail on USA Network's Swamp Thing (1991–1992), and Maggie Beckett on the Fox/Syfy series Sliders (1997–2000).
Swamp Woman is a 1941 American drama film directed by Elmer Clifton and starring Ann Corio, Jack La Rue and Ian MacDonald. [1] It was made as an independent production and distributed by Producers Releasing Corporation .
Swamp Women is a 1956 American adventure film noir crime film directed by Roger Corman. It stars Carole Mathews, Beverly Garland, and Marie Windsor, with Mike Connors and Ed Nelson in small roles. The film follows undercover police officer Lee Hampton, who infiltrates a band of three female convicts authorities allow to escape from prison.
Anne Savisa Boonchuy (Thai: แอนน์ สาวิสา บุญช่วย; voiced by Brenda Song [1]) is a self-assured, adventurous, and fearless Thai-American human girl originally from Los Angeles, California, [2] who, on her 13th birthday, gets magically transported to Amphibia alongside Sasha and Marcy after opening a mysterious chest known as the Calamity Box.
Swamp People is an American reality television series that was first broadcast on History on August 22, 2010. The show follows the day-to-day activities of alligator hunters living in the swamps of the Atchafalaya River Basin who hunt American alligators for a living.
Longtime reality TV competition premieres Sept. 27, 2023, on CBS and Paramount ‘Amazing Race’ 2023 cast includes 4 women from Florida. When & how to watch reality show
In 1940, after her move to Hollywood and entering Ouspenskaya's drama school, she appeared in the play Forty Thousand Smiths, her first use of the stage name "Marie Windsor". [11] The next year she appeared in Once in a Lifetime at the Pasadena Playhouse. [16] She also played a villain in a New York production of Follow the Girls. [17]
Bowling has directed over 30 music videos for various artists (shot on 8mm or 16mm film).. In the music video for Kat Meoz's "Here I Wait", Bowling shot the only existing footage of Richard Brautigan's papier-mâché bird Willard who was the subject of his 1975 novel Willard and His Bowling Trophies.