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Jeannie Seely Most Promising Female Country Vocalist Won [1] 1967 Top Female Vocalist – Singles Nominated [2] 1968 Nominated [3] 1969 Nominated [4] 1970 Jack Greene and Jeannie Seely Top Duo's and Group Singles Nominated [5] Top Duo's and Group Albums Nominated 1972 Jeannie Seely Top Female Vocalist – Singles Nominated [6]
Julie McWhirter, also known as Julie Dees and Julie McWhirter-Dees, is a retired American voice actress and impressionist best known for her work as Jeannie in the animated version of Jeannie, Bubbles in Jabberjaw and Baby Smurf and Sassette in The Smurfs.
Producer Joe Byrne caught the 1973 PBS television production and saw the potential for a weekly series, so he convinced an executive at Warner Bros. to option the rights. [1] All three American TV networks loved it and were keen on keeping Jose Perez as God, but Byrne refused to tone down the material [ 1 ] so the project sat in limbo until ...
Jeannie Seely "Jeannie's Song" [29] — — — — Please Be My New Love "Wish I Didn't Have to Miss You" (with Jack Greene) — 2 — 21 Jack Greene, Jeannie Seely "Please Be My New Love" 1970 — 46 — — Please Be My New Love "Tell Me Again" — 58 — — Can I Sleep in Your Arms/Lucky Ladies "You Don't Understand Him Like I Do" 1971 ...
Jack Greene, Jeannie Seely is a studio album by American country music artists Jack Greene and Jeannie Seely. It was released by Decca Records in January 1970 and contained 11 tracks of mostly cover tunes.
Jeannie is an American animated television series that originally aired for a 16-episode season on CBS from September 8 to December 22, 1973. It was produced by Hanna-Barbera in association with Screen Gems , and its founders William Hanna and Joseph Barbera are the executive producers .
Dragonology: The Complete Book of Dragons was followed up by a number of additional Dragonology books (and other merchandise), including Tracking and Taming Dragons: Vol. 1 [4] and Vol. 2, [5] Dr. Ernest Drake's Dragonology Handbook: A Practical Course in Dragons, [6] and Drake's Comprehensive Compendium of Dragonology [7] among others.
The third series of the British science fiction programme Primeval began on 28 March 2009 and concluded on 6 June 2009 after airing ten episodes. Primeval follows a team of scientists tasked with investigating the appearance of temporal anomalies across the United Kingdom through which prehistoric and futuristic creatures enter the present.