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Mary Louise Day (February 19, 1968–2017) [1] was an American teenager who, at age 13 in 1981, mysteriously disappeared from her home in Seaside, California. She was found alive in 2003, a little more than twenty-two years after her disappearance.
The episode is focused on the decades-long search for Mary Louise Day, who went missing from her Seaside, Calif., home in 1981 when she was 13 years old and was believed by many to have been killed.
Blood Tide is a 1982 British horror film directed by Richard Jefferies, and starring James Earl Jones, José Ferrer, Lila Kedrova, Lydia Cornell, Mary Louise Weller, Martin Kove, and Deborah Shelton.
Opening Title Production company Cast and crew Ref. J A N U A R Y: 7 Scream: Cal-Com: Byron Quisenberry (director/screenplay); Pepper Martin, Hank Worden, Ethan Wayne, Alvy Moore, Bobby Diamond, Woody Strode, Ann Bronston, Julie Marine, Nancy St. Marie, Joseph Alvarado, John Nowak, Joe Allaine, Cynthia Faria, Bella Bluck, Dee Cooper, Bob Macgonigal, Gino Difirelli, Gregg Palmer
Mary Anna Day (1852–1924), American botanist and librarian; Mary E. Day, in the 2005 Supreme Court opinion Varian v. Delfino; Mary L. Day (1836–?), American memoirist; Mary Gage Day (1857–1935), American physician and medical writer; Mary Louise Day (1968–2017), teenage girl who mysteriously disappeared from her home
Incubus [i] is a 1981 Canadian supernatural slasher film directed by John Hough and starring John Cassavetes, Kerrie Keane, and John Ireland.The plot focuses on a small Wisconsin town where a mysterious figure is raping and murdering young women. [6]
Luke and Laura's 1981 TV wedding was a huge event — though not filled with all rosy memories for actors Anthony Geary and Genie Francis, who shot in the heat. Princess Diana sent Champagne.
Longtime Companion is a 1989 American romantic drama film directed by Norman René and starring Bruce Davison, Campbell Scott, Patrick Cassidy, and Mary-Louise Parker.The first wide-release theatrical film to deal with the subject of AIDS, the film takes its title from the euphemism The New York Times used during the 1980s to describe the surviving same-sex partner of someone who had died of AIDS.