Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Alexander Haig was married to Patricia (née Fox), with whom he had three children: Alexander Patrick Haig, Barbara Haig, and Brian Haig. [7] Haig's younger brother, Frank Haig , was a Jesuit priest and professor emeritus of physics at Loyola University in Baltimore, Maryland.
The Day Reagan Was Shot is a 2001 American made-for-television film drama film directed by Cyrus Nowrasteh and co-produced by Oliver Stone.The film stars Richard Dreyfuss as Alexander Haig and Richard Crenna as Ronald Reagan, and co-stars Michael Murphy, Holland Taylor, Kenneth Welsh and Colm Feore.
18½ is a 2021 American comedy thriller film directed by Dan Mirvish and written by Daniel Moya, based on a story by both. The film stars Willa Fitzgerald, John Magaro, Vondie Curtis-Hall, Catherine Curtin, Richard Kind, Sullivan Jones and the voices of Jon Cryer as H. R. Haldeman, Ted Raimi as Alexander Haig and Bruce Campbell as President Richard Nixon.
In 1982, when U. S. Secretary of State Alexander Haig refused to grant a travel visa for Paisley to speak at the University's annual Bible Conference, Jones used strong language from the imprecatory Psalms to denounce Haig, urging God to "destroy him utterly." The flap was widely reported in the media, and Jones was "swamped with vituperative ...
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie; Ben Kingsley – Anne Frank: The Whole Story as Otto Frank. Alan Alda – Club Land as Willie Walters; Richard Dreyfuss – The Day Reagan Was Shot as Alexander Haig; James Franco – James ...
In another esteemed telepic that year, “The Final Days,” about the Nixon White House, the actor played Gen. Alexander Haig. In addition to his work for Woody Allen, he played a wealthy ...
Alexander Haig (1924–2010), U.S. Army general, White House Chief of Staff and U.S. Secretary of State Brian Haig (born 1953), American novelist David Haig (born 1955), British actor
Alexander M. Haig became the second host of the program. Haig hosted more than one thousand episodes during the taping period November 2000 to November 2006, from episodes #711B to at least #1818. In September 2006, World Business Review introduced its third host, Norman Schwarzkopf.