Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Decoy (also titled Policewoman Decoy) [1] is an American crime drama television series created for syndication and initially broadcast from October 14, 1957, to July 7, 1958, with 39 black-and-white 30-minute episodes. The series was the first American police series with a female protagonist. [2] Many Decoy episodes are in the public domain. [3]
Decoy is a 1946 American film noir starring Jean Gillie, Edward Norris, Robert Armstrong, Herbert Rudley, and Sheldon Leonard. Directed by Jack Bernhard , it was produced by him and Bernard Brandt as a Jack Bernhard Production, with a screenplay by Nedrick Young based on an original story by Stanley Rubin .
Release date Title Notes January 5, 1950: The File on Thelma Jordon: produced by Wallis-Hazen From this point forward, Paramount owns most of the following titles.
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "This unlikely affair is so unconvincing in its succession of coincidences and improbabilities that it becomes almost disarming. The dialogue, though, is rather worse than the plot, and liberally sprinkled with Americanisms which are partly excused by the fact that the hero is an American actor – who seems to make all his films in this country."
Indonesia: The Land and the People: J.O.M. Broek: c-13m: February 20, 1957: Video (BW version) Inertial Mass and the Laws of Motion: Alfred M. Bork: c-13m: November 1, 1968: Infectious Diseases and Man-Made Defenses: William Burrows: c-11m: October 3, 1960: Video: Infectious Diseases and Natural Body Defenses: William Burrows: c-11m: October 10 ...
A total of 13 people died in the 1957 Mille Miglia. Both de Portago and Nelson died in the Ferrari crash, as did nine spectators (five of whom were children), and 20 more spectators were injured.
The Lineup is a 1958 American film noir version of the police procedural television series of the same title that ran on CBS radio from 1950 until 1953, and on CBS television from 1954 until 1960.
While Shohei Ohtani homered and stole two bases in the Dodgers’ 6-4 win over the Baltimore Orioles, his achievements were overshadowed as his dog “threw” the ceremonial first pitch.