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Bob Drury is an American writer and journalist. He has contributed to a variety of newspapers, magazines, and other publications. He is the author of over twelve non ...
James Drury as Dr. Paul Ridgely; Wendell Holmes as Tallant Joslin; Edmon Ryan as William P. Selby, Attorney; Stacy Harris as Coley; Kathryn Card as Molly Cain; Emile Meyer as Marshal Hiram Cain; Bing Russell as George Fletcher; Russell Thorson as Harry Lander; Denver Pyle as Deputy Ed Moore; Phil Chambers as Deputy William Avery; Howard McNear ...
Peg of Old Drury [3] Biopic: Herbert Wilcox: Anna Neagle, Cedric Hardwicke, Margaretta Scott: The Price of Wisdom [2] [3] Drama: Reginald Denham: Mary Jerrold, Roger Livesey, Lilian Oldland: Royal Cavalcade [2] [3] Thomas Bentley, Herbert Brenon, W. P. Kellino, Norman Lee, Walter Summers, Marcel Varnel: Marie Lohr, Hermione Baddeley, Owen Nares ...
Beginning with the 1971 season, ABC added a second MotW on Saturday night and adjusted the titles of the shows to the Movie of the Week and Movie of the Weekend. The following season, the Saturday installment was moved to Wednesday night, and the titles were adjusted to Tuesday Movie of the Week and Wednesday Movie of the Week.
After being shut down in 1997, the Triumph Films label was re-activated in 2003. The label went dormant again, becoming an in-name-only division of Sony Pictures Releasing Corporation. [1] In 2014, the label was revived yet again for the release of The Remaining. Their direct-to-video role has been taken by Destination Films within Sony.
At the end of World War II, a short film was commissioned from Paramount Pictures by the United States Department of the Treasury, to promote the purchase of Victory Bonds. Some 19 minutes in length, Hollywood Victory Caravan was released in October 1945 and featured Bing Crosby and Bob Hope, as well as celebrities who were not on the original ...
Producers Releasing Corporation (generally known as PRC) was the smallest and least prestigious of the 11 Hollywood film companies of the 1940s. [1] It was considered a prime example of what was called "Poverty Row": a low-rent stretch of Gower Street in Hollywood where shoestring film producers based their operations.
We see many B&W pictures of the actual characters depicted in the movie, as well as pictures from the production of the Mary Poppins film. In the middle of the credits we see and hear a reel-to-reel tape recorder playing back one of the actual taped work sessions between Mrs. Travers and the Disney staff. The Purge