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Palm Springs Weekend is a 1963 Warner Bros. bedroom comedy film directed by Norman Taurog. [2] It has elements of the beach party genre (AIP's Beach Party became a smash hit in July, while Warner Bros. was still putting this film together [3]) and has been called "a sort of Westernized version of Where the Boys Are" by Billboard magazine. [4]
November 1963 5 November Palm Springs Weekend; 6 November Gunfight at Comanche Creek; 7 November Carry On Cabby (United Kingdom) It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World; 13 November The Skydivers; Sunday in New York; Take Her, She's Mine; 14 November The Wheeler Dealers; 18 November The Victors; 20 November The Incredible Journey; 23 November McLintock ...
Title Director Cast Genre Note 13 Frightened Girls: William Castle: Murray Hamilton, Joyce Taylor: Thriller: Columbia: 4 for Texas: Robert Aldrich: Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Anita Ekberg, Ursula Andress, Charles Bronson
These communities, which include Palm Springs, Bermuda Dunes, Cathedral City, Coachella, Desert Hot Springs, Indian Wells, Indio, La Quinta, Mecca, Palm Desert, Rancho Mirage, and the Salton Sea, are in Riverside County, southern California. Included are individual episodes of TV series.
This page was last edited on 31 October 2024, at 23:03 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
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Johnson's most notable films are several beach party productions by American International Pictures, in which she plays Candy, a girl who could dance so hard it would literally knock the guys off their feet. In Beach Party (1963) she is credited as the "perpetual motion dancer." Filmink called her a "breakout character". [1]
Kirk Douglas (born Issur Danielovitch; December 9, 1916 – February 5, 2020) was an American actor and filmmaker.After an impoverished childhood, he made his film debut in The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946) with Barbara Stanwyck.