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The Bellboy came about after Paramount wanted a Lewis film for summer release in North America. Paramount wanted to release Cinderfella, which had finished shooting in December 1959, but Lewis wanted to hold back the release of Cinderfella until Christmas 1960. Paramount agreed to his terms if he could deliver another film for the summer ...
Tokofsky began his connection with the film business as an agent, and by the 1960s had become a studio executive at Columbia Pictures. [2] In 1966, he was a vice-president of Columbia. [3] He then produced films for the studio. [4] Harrison Ford had an early onscreen role as a bellhop in Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round (1966), on which Tokofsky ...
Title Director Cast Genre Note Cast a Giant Shadow: Melville Shavelson: Kirk Douglas, Senta Berger, Yul Brynner, Frank Sinatra, Angie Dickinson, John Wayne: Action: Warner Bros. ...
Death of a Salesman is a 1966 American made-for-television video adaptation of the 1949 play of the same name by Arthur Miller. It was directed by Alex Segal and adapted for television by Miller. It received numerous nominations for awards, and won several of them, including three Primetime Emmy Awards , a Directors Guild of America Award and a ...
The Legend of Marilyn Monroe is a 1966 American documentary film chronicling the life and career of actress Marilyn Monroe.Directed by Terry Sanders, and narrated by John Huston, the film was also released under the title The Marilyn Monroe Story in the UK.
Cowboy is a 1966 American short documentary film directed by Michael Ahnemann and produced by Ahnemann and Gary Schlosser. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short . [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
The film was announced in September 1964 as Eli Kotch and producer Carter de Haven and writer Bernard Girad set up a company, Crescent, at Columbia. [2] Both men had worked extensively in television and wanted to get into features. The film was an original of Girard's. "I wouldn't so much call Eli Kotch a con man as a contemporary hero," said ...
Modesty Blaise is a 1966 British spy comedy film directed by Joseph Losey, produced by Joseph Janni and loosely based on the comic strip of the same name by Peter O'Donnell, who co-wrote the original story upon which Evan Jones and Harold Pinter based their screenplay.