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Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "Television series based on Treasure Island" ... Treasure Island (1977 TV series) Treasure Island (1978 TV ...
Treasure Island, original title Die Schatzinsel, is a German-French mini-series, produced for German television station ZDF in 1966. The screenplay by Walter Ulbrich , who also co-produced the film, remains largely close to Robert Louis Stevenson 's classic 1883 novel Treasure Island .
The Adventures of Long John Silver is a TV series about the Long John Silver character from Robert Louis Stevenson's 1883 novel Treasure Island. It was made in 1954 in colour in Australia for the American and British markets before the development of Australian television. [1]
The Story of Treasure Island: United States J. Stuart Blackton: Short film based on Treasure Island: L'Honneur du corsaire: France Victorin-Hippolyte Jasset: Charles Krauss: Short film The Pirate's Gold: United States D. W. Griffith: George Gebhardt, Linda Arvidson, Charles Inslee: Short Film 1909 Morgan le pirate: France Victorin-Hippolyte ...
Treasure Island is a 1950 adventure film produced by RKO-Walt Disney British Productions, adapted from Robert Louis Stevenson's 1883 novel of the same name. Directed by Byron Haskin , it stars Bobby Driscoll as Jim Hawkins and Robert Newton as Long John Silver .
Treasure Island ' s success prompted Newton to return to Hollywood. He was one of several British actors in Soldiers Three (1951), an Imperial adventure tale. He returned to Britain for Tom Brown's Schooldays (1951) to play Thomas Arnold, then was cast by 20th Century Fox as Javert in their version of Les Misérables (1952). In 1951, he was ...
Robert Cletus Driscoll (March 3, 1937 – March 30, 1968) was an American actor who performed on film and television from 1943 to 1960. He starred in some of the Walt Disney Studios' best-known live-action pictures of that period: Song of the South (1946), So Dear to My Heart (1949), and Treasure Island (1950), as well as RKO's The Window (1949).
It is the follow-up to the 1960/61 series Mister Magoo, with Jim Backus reprising the title role. [2] Unlike the theatrical cartoons, which focused on the extremely nearsighted Quincy Magoo's bumbling, the show features the Magoo character as an actor in adaptations of such literary classics as Don Quixote and "Gunga Din". [3]