Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Only the Lonely was released in the United States and Canada on May 24, 1991. During its opening weekend it grossed a total of $6 million from 1,521 theaters—an average of $3,943 per theater—making it the fifth-highest grossing film of the weekend, behind the debuting Thelma & Louise ($6.1 million) and ahead of the debuting Drop Dead Fred ...
The first single from All Four One was "Only the Lonely", which reached No. 9 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 27 on the Adult Contemporary chart, [6] as well as No. 6 on the Billboard Top Tracks chart. The song "Mission of Mercy" also received enough airplay to reach No. 23 on the Top Tracks chart.
Prey is the thirteenth novel by Michael Crichton under his own name and his twenty-third novel overall. It was first published in November 2002, making it his first novel of the twenty-first century. It was first published in November 2002, making it his first novel of the twenty-first century.
Q placed Only the Lonely at No. 1 on the "15 Greatest Stoner Albums of All Time". [12] The album peaked at No. 1 on Billboard′s pop album chart during a 120-week chart-run, and was certified Gold on June 21, 1962, nearly four years after its release. [13]
"Only the Lonely" is a song by American new wave band The Motels. It was released in 1982 as the first single from their third studio album All Four One. Propelled by a popular music video, it debuted at number 90 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 on April 24, 1982. It would ultimately climb to number 9 on July 17 of that year where it spent four ...
"Only the Lonely (Know the Way I Feel)" is a 1960 song written by Roy Orbison and Joe Melson. [3] Orbison's recording of the song, produced by Fred Foster for Monument Records , was the first major hit for the singer.
Only the Lonely is an EP released by Unkle on 4 April 2011. [1] Its entire track list also appears on Unkle's Where Did the Night Fall – Another Night Out.
In a family tree chart first published inside the front cover of Many Waters (1986, ISBN 0-374-34796-4), L'Engle divided her major characters into categories she called "chronos" and "kairos", two Greek terms for different concepts of time. The stories of the Austin family take place in a chronos environment, which L'Engle defined as "ordinary ...