Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Cat & Mouse (also known as Cat and Mouse; U.S. title: The Desperate Men) is a 1958 British crime drama film directed by Paul Rotha, starring Lee Patterson, Ann Sears and Victor Maddern. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The screenplay was by Rotha, based on the 1955 novel Cat and Mouse by John Creasey , writing as Michael Halliday.
Zudora (1914–1915), a 20-part serial whose first installment was released just over three months after producer Charles J. Hite's death in an automobile accident; Hite was on the way to his home in New Rochelle, New York, and was crossing the viaduct at 155th Street in Manhattan when his vehicle skidded off the roadway and onto the sidewalk, tore through an iron railing and plunged fifty ...
In 2004, Moses was cast as Paul Young in the ABC mystery comedy-drama series Desperate Housewives. [3] As the disturbed husband of the deceased Mary Alice Young, Paul was a key character in the show's original main mystery. He left the series as regular cast member after two seasons, but still made some guest appearances in the third season.
Desperate Man, by Eric Church "Desperate Man" (song), the title track; The Desperate Man, a 1959 British B movie crime film; The Desperate Man, a French novel by Léon Bloy "A Desperate Man", an episode of American crime drama series NCIS; Le Désespéré, also known as The Desperate Man in English, a self-portrait by Gustave Courbet
His last series as a cast-member was the 1967 ABC Western Hondo, playing Captain Richards. [ 3 ] Clarke said in an interview that his friend and co-star Steve Ihnat and he wrote the screenplay for director Ted V. Mikels ' film Strike Me Deadly (1963), [ 5 ] though the film's credits list only Ihnat and Mikels.
Angela Bassett is reacting to the tragic news that a 9-1-1 crew member was killed in a car accident after working a late 14-hour shift on the procedural drama. The 65-year-old actress, who stars ...
Former Bee Gees drummers Colin "Smiley" Petersen and Dennis Bryon, who played with the quintessential disco group in the 1960s and 1970s, respectively, have died within days of each other.
Bergen was born in Knoxville, Tennessee to Lucy (née Lawhorne; 1909–1985) and William Hugh Burgin (1909–1982), a construction engineer. [1] Bill Bergen, as he was later known, had singing talent and appeared with his daughter in several episodes of her 18-episode comedy/variety show The Polly Bergen Show, which aired during the 1957–1958 television season to much fanfare.