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Cast Genre Notes The Call of the Circus: Frank O'Connor: Francis X. Bushman, Ethel Clayton: Drama: Pickwick Pictures [50] Call of the Flesh: Charles Brabin: Ramón Novarro, Dorothy Jordan, Ernest Torrence: Musical/Romance/Drama: MGM. [51] In partial Technicolor. Call of the West: Albert Ray: Dorothy Revier, Tom O'Brien, Alan Roscoe: Western ...
Liberty is a television film which aired on NBC on June 23, 1986. [1] It is a largely fictionalized account of the construction of the Statue of Liberty , which had been completed 100 years earlier. Scenes were shot on location in Paris and Baltimore.
The Statue of Liberty (Liberty Enlightening the World; French: La Liberté éclairant le monde) is a colossal neoclassical sculpture on Liberty Island in New York Harbor, within New York City. The copper -clad statue, a gift to the United States from the people of France , was designed by French sculptor Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi and its ...
In the season 1 episode Our Huge Adventure from Little Einsteins, the team must find a way to get the butterfly back to its tree with the other butterflies. They travel to the Statue of Liberty in one part. In the 2006 Wonder Pets! Season 1 episode "Save the Pigeon", the group must rescue a baby pigeon who is stuck in the Statue of Liberty's nose.
Bobs Watson (upper left) featured on a theatrical release poster for Men of Boys Town (1941). Robert Ball Watson [1] was a member of the Watson Family, famous in the early days of Hollywood as being a houseful of child actors.
The Statue of Liberty is a 1985 American documentary film on the history of the Statue of Liberty (Liberty Enlightening the World). It was produced and directed by Ken Burns . [ 2 ] The film, which first aired in October 1985, was narrated by historian David McCullough .
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The shots of the replica were intercut with footage shot at the real Statue of Liberty. On the casting of the white actor Joel Grey, who went through four and a half hours of make-up every day to look like an elderly Korean, producer Larry Spiegel claimed "We assumed, of course, that we would be using an oriental actor.