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"Hello Mary Lou" is a song written by American singer Gene Pitney [3] [4] [5] first recorded by Johnny Duncan in 1960 [6] and by Ricky Nelson at United Western Recorders Studios on March 22, 1961. Nelson's version, issued as a double A-side with his No. 1 hit " Travelin' Man ", (Imperial 5741), reached No. 9 on the Billboard music charts on May ...
Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II is a 1987 Canadian supernatural slasher film [5] directed by Bruce Pittman, written by Ron Oliver, and starring Michael Ironside, Wendy Lyon, Louis Ferreira, and Lisa Schrage. It follows a high school student who becomes possessed by Mary Lou Maloney, a
"Travelin' Man" is an American popular song, best known as a 1961 hit single sung by Ricky Nelson. Singer-songwriter Jerry Fuller wrote it with Sam Cooke in mind, but Cooke's manager was unimpressed and did not keep the demo, which eventually wound up being passed along to Nelson.
"Mary Lou", a 1955 song by Young Jessie "Mary Lou", a song by Bruce Springsteen on his 1998 album Tracks; Marylou, an album by Swiss singer Anna Rossinelli "Good Bye Mary Lou" a song by Angels of Light from their fifth record We Are Him; Hello Mary Lou, a song by Gene Pitney recorded by Johnny Duncan, Ricky Nelson and Gene Pitney himself.
Prom Night is a 1980 slasher film directed by Paul Lynch and written by William Gray. Jamie Lee Curtis and Leslie Nielsen star. The film's plot follows a group of high school seniors who are targeted at their prom by a masked killer, seeking vengeance for the accidental death of a young girl six years earlier.
Ronald Bruce Pittman (born February 4, 1950) is a Canadian television and film director best known for directing the 1987 slasher Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II. [1] He also directed the 1989 film Where the Spirit Lives, which won the Gemini Award for Best TV movie and numerous international awards.
Terri Hawkes (born 1958 or 1959) [3] is a Canadian actress and writer, known for playing Kelly Hennenlotter in the horror film, Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II, Adrienne in Beverly Hills 90210, Wendy Masters in General Hospital, and for being the second English dub voice actress of the title character of the Japanese anime Sailor Moon.
Only four hours later, they entered the studio and recorded their first record tracks. Their first single, "Forty Days", was a barely disguised knockoff of Chuck Berry's "Thirty Days" with the song "Mary Lou" by Young Jessie on the B-side; it reached number 26 on the US pop charts, becoming Hawkins's biggest hit. [11]