Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Only Banks, Ford and Mayes remained in the group. L.J. Reynolds left to go solo in 1981 [7] and Larry Demps decided to go into teaching and spend more time with his family, after having joined the group's original line-up in 1964 with Banks. When Ron Banks also decided to try a solo career, the group disbanded for a few years, but re-formed in ...
"Bro. not cool," one person captioned a TikTok video of their reaction to Brimsley and Reynolds' final scene in the garden, featuring red-rimmed eyes and tears running down her face.
Title Page to the First Edition of The Mysteries of London. The Mysteries of London is a "penny blood" or city mysteries novel begun by George W. M. Reynolds in 1844. Recent scholarship has uncovered that it "was almost certainly the most widely read single work of fiction in mid-nineteenth century Britain, and attracted more readers than did the novels of Dickens, Bulwer-Lytton or Trollope."
In January 1974, Reynolds signed to do the movie, and filming started in February 1974 in Nashville. [5] Reynolds approved John Avildsen on the basis of a recommendation from Jack Lemmon, who had worked with the director on Save the Tiger. [6] John Avildsen says Sylvester Stallone auditioned for a supporting role.
They Came to a City is a 1944 British black-and-white film directed by Basil Dearden and starring John Clements, Googie Withers, Raymond Huntley, Renee Gadd and A. E. Matthews. [1] It was adapted from the 1943 play of the same title by J. B. Priestley , and is notable for including a cameo appearance by Priestley as himself.
These Old Broads is a 2001 American made-for-television comedy film directed by Matthew Diamond, written by Carrie Fisher and Elaine Pope, and starring Fisher's mother Debbie Reynolds, as well as Shirley MacLaine, Joan Collins, and Elizabeth Taylor in her final film role.
Richard Joshua Reynolds, born in 1850 on a tobacco plantation in Patrick County, Va., moved to the crossroads community of Winston in 1874 to start his own tobacco manufacturing company. He ...
The film's most famous scene depicts Reynolds playing a human American football in a dance sequence. The movie reunited Reynolds and O'Connor after their 1952 smash hit Singin' in the Rain , However, according to MGM records, the film earned $1,316,000 in the United States and Canada and $654,000 overseas, resulting in a loss of $290,000.