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Intertitle of the 1954 version of The House in the Middle, selected for preservation in the National Film Registry. The House in the Middle is the title of two American documentary film shorts (13 minutes), respectively from 1953 and 1954, which showed the effects of a nuclear bomb test on a set of three small houses.
Concert Tonight – one episode from 1954 and one from 1953. The latter aired on WGN on December 3, 1953, though it's unclear when it aired over the network. Cosmopolitan Theatre - one episode from October 23, 1951, "Reward, One Million". Dark of Night – one episode (January 30, 1953) Doorway to Fame – two episodes (March 30 and April 1949)
The House Across the Lake (U.S. title: Heat Wave) is a 1954 British film noir crime film directed and written by Ken Hughes and starring Alex Nicol, Hillary Brooke, Sid James and Susan Stephen. [1] It was produced as a second feature [2] by Hammer Films. It was released in the United States by Lippert Pictures.
The House That Would Not Die [a] is a 1970 American made-for-television supernatural horror film starring Barbara Stanwyck (in her television film debut), Richard Egan, Michael Anderson Jr. and Kitty Winn. It premiered as the ABC Movie of the Week on October 27, 1970.
John Zorn (born September 2, 1953) is an American composer, conductor, saxophonist, arranger and producer who "deliberately resists category". [1] His avant-garde and experimental approaches to composition and improvisation are inclusive of jazz, rock, Jewish music, hardcore, classical, contemporary, surf, metal, soundtrack, ambient, and world music.
The album Betty Wright: The Movie, credited to Betty Wright and the Roots, produced by Wright and Ahmir Questlove Thompson was released November 15, 2011 on Ms. B Records/S-Curve Records. [27] Betty Wright: The Movie also included collaborations with Joss Stone , Snoop Dogg , Lil Wayne and Lenny Williams . [ 28 ] "
The House I Live In is a ten-minute short film written by Albert Maltz, produced by Frank Ross and Mervyn LeRoy, and starring Frank Sinatra. Made to oppose anti-Semitism at the end of World War II , it received an Honorary Academy Award [ 1 ] and a special Golden Globe Award in 1946.
The movie Un Chien Andalou virtually took my breath away." [ 4 ] Klarwein added "Abdul" (which means "servant of-" in Arabic) to his name in the late 1950s to express his sentiments about the hostility between Jews and Muslims in the Middle East : he felt that to understand each other better, every Jew should adopt a Muslim first name, and vice ...