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Robert Bruce Winne was born in Kingston, New York, [2] and he grew up in Ulster County, New York. [3] He was the son of a hardware merchant and a cousin of the Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton. [citation needed] He attended Blair Academy, a small boarding school in Blairstown, New Jersey.
Timothy Hutton (born August 16, 1960) [1] is an American actor and film director. He is the youngest recipient of the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor , which he won at age 20 for Ordinary People (1980).
They Came from Beyond Space is a 1967 British Eastman Color science fiction film directed by Freddie Francis and starring Robert Hutton, Jennifer Jayne, Zia Mohyeddin and Bernard Kay. [1] It was produced by Max J. Rosenberg and Milton Subotsky. The screenplay was by Subotsky, based on the 1941 novel The Gods Hate Kansas by Joseph Millard.
Showdown at Boot Hill is a 1958 American Western film directed by Gene Fowler Jr., written by Louis Vittes, and starring Charles Bronson, Robert Hutton, John Carradine, Carole Mathews, Fintan Meyler and Paul Maxey.
The film stars Joan Leslie, Robert Hutton, Edward Arnold, Ann Harding, Robert Benchley, and Dorothy Malone. The film was released by Warner Bros. on June 22, 1946. [1] [2] This is a sequel to 1944's Janie. Hutton, Arnold, Harding, and Benchley reprise their earlier roles, but Leslie replaces actress Joyce Reynolds in the title role.
The film stars Cary Grant and John Garfield and features Dane Clark, Robert Hutton, and Warner Anderson, along with John Ridgely, Alan Hale Sr. and William Prince. Destination Tokyo has been called "the granddaddy of submarine films like Run Silent, Run Deep (1958), Das Boot (1981), and U-571 (2000)". [4]
The Sicilians is a 1964 British second feature [1] film directed by Ernest Morris and starring Robert Hutton, Reginald Marsh and Ursula Howells. [2] The screenplay was by Ronald Liles and Reginald Hearne.
Starring Joan Leslie and Robert Hutton as fictional characters, [32] the film also featured a plethora of stars—many of whom had volunteered at the real canteen—playing themselves. [39] It was written and directed by Delmer Daves. Warner Bros. donated 40% of proceeds from the film to both the Hollywood Canteen and the Stage Door Canteen in ...