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Scott Gregory Marlowe (born Ronald Richard DeLeo; June 24, 1932 – January 6, 2001) [1] was an American actor who had starring roles in the teen exploitation film The Cool and the Crazy (1958, alongside Dick Bakalyan) and the May-December independent film, A Cold Wind in August (1961, opposite Lola Albright).
Scott Marlowe as Bennie Saul; Richard Bakalyan as Jackie Barzan; Gigi Perreau as Amy; Dickie Jones as Stu Summerville; Shelby Storck as Detective Lt. Sloan; Anthony Pawley as Mr. Saul; Chrystle Pawley as the girl in the "Blue Note" Cafe who spoke the line "Jackie, you have a telephone call." She was the wife of Anthony Pawley, and her name is ...
A Cold Wind in August is a 1961 low-budget drama exploitation film directed by Alexander Singer and adapted from the eponymous novel by Burton Wohl. [2] The film stars Lola Albright as a mentally unbalanced burlesque-show stripper in her 30s who becomes involved in a torrid romance with a 17-year-old boy played by Scott Marlowe.
Test is a 2013 American drama film written and directed by Chris Mason Johnson, starring Scott Marlowe and Matthew Risch. The film is set in San Francisco in 1985, during the early years of the AIDS crisis. It follows Frankie, an understudy for a contemporary dance company, as he pursues a sexual relationship with another, more experienced ...
While the radio series had relatively few recurring supporting characters, and those roles were often shared, the following actors played recurring roles with comparative consistency, in addition to a variety of one-time roles
The film stars Gene Evans, Scott Marlowe, Carolyn Kearney, Robert Arthur, Weston Gavin and Tom Gilson. The film was released on April 24, 1958, by Republic Pictures.
"Boys Back Home" is a song by American singer-songwriters Dylan Marlowe and Dylan Scott. It was released on December 4, 2023 as the lead single from Marlowe's debut studio album, Mid-Twenties Crisis. [1] It also appeared as a bonus track on the re-issue of Scott's second studio album, Livin' My Best Life. [2]
Hugh Marlowe (born Hugh Herbert Hipple; January 30, 1911 – May 2, 1982) was an American film, television, stage, and radio actor. [1] Early life.