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#Mrs Pollifax Spy
geekynerfherder · 2 years
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'Mrs Pollifax - Spy' by Frank Frazetta.
Artwork from the movie poster for 'Mrs Pollifax - Spy', released in 1971.
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whimseysthrone · 2 years
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Mrs. Pollifax, elderly women as spies cont.
Mrs. Pollifax, elderly women as spies cont.
As I was writing last week’s post, I knew that I was forgetting something. I’d read fun stories about an elderly woman involved in espionage before. Or more accurately, I’d listened to them: some of my childhood’s many long car rides were filled with hours of Dorothy Gilman’s Mrs. Pollifax books on tape. Young Henry thought those books were both hilarious and excellent. I haven’t read them…
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film-classics · 4 months
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Rosalind Russell - The Miracle Woman
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Catherine Rosalind Russell (born in Waterbury, Connecticut on June 4, 1907) was an American actress known for playing sassy, wisecracking women in 1930s and '40s comedies. Despite going through postpartum depression, the deaths of her siblings, breast cancer, and rheumatoid arthritis, she thrived as a charismatic actress on film and the stage, earning the nickname "The Miracle Woman.”
Raised in a strict Irish-American, Catholic family. She attended  Rosemont College and Marymount College, before graduating from the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City, unbeknownst to her parents who believed she was studying to be a speech teacher.
Against parental objections, she began her career as a fashion model and took acting jobs in upstate New York, Connecticut, and Boston before eventually appearing in Broadway.
In 1933, Russell went to Los Angeles, where she was hired as a contract player for Universal Studios but did not appear in a movie. Unhappy at Universal, she moved to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, where she broke through in the classic screwball comedy His Girl Friday (1940), directed by Howard Hawks.
She took a break after giving birth from her career, but made a comeback with RKO Pictures and then with Columbia Pictures. She continued to appear in critically acclaimed movies and Broadway shows through the mid-1960s, including the title role of the long-running stage comedy Auntie Mame (based on a Patrick Dennis novel) as well as the 1958 film version.
After years of battling breast cancer and even getting a double mastectomy, she died at her home in Beverly Hills, California at 69 years of age. Months after her death, she was honored by her acting colleagues with the “Interlude With Rosalind Russell” at the Shubert Theater in Broadway.
Legacy:
Nominated four times for the Academy Award for Best Actress for her performances in My Sister Eileen (1942), Sister Kenny (1946), Mourning Becomes Electra (1947), and Auntie Mame (1958)
Won all five of her Golden Globe Award for Best Actress nominations: Sister Kenny (1946), Mourning Becomes Electra (1947), Auntie Mame (1958), A Majority of One (1961), and Gypsy (1962)
Won the 1953 Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical for Wonderful Town and was nominated for the 1957 for Best Actress in a Play for Auntie Mame
Nominated for the 1959 BAFTA Award for Best Foreign Actress
Won the Golden Apple Award in 1942 for Most Cooperative Actress
Awarded the Look Magazine Award for Film Achievement Award in 1947
Covered Time magazine in 1953
Was the namesake of the Rosalind Russell State Theater in her hometown in 1955
Wrote the story for the film The Unguarded Moment (1956) and adapted the novel, The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax, into the screenplay for Mrs. Pollifax-Spy in 1971, under the pen name C.A. McKnight
Won the Golden Laurel for Top Female Comedy Performance for Auntie Mame (1958) and was nominated five more times
Presented with a medallion by the National Conference of Christians and Jews in 1962
Honored for her distinguished service by the UCLA in 1964
Named the Woman of the Year by Hasty Pudding Theatricals, a student society at Harvard University, in 1964
Is the recipient of the Floyd B. Odlum Award by the Arthritis Foundation in 1971
Appointed by Congress to serve on the National Commission on Arthritis and Related Musculoskeletal Diseases during the 1970s
Received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement in 1972
Appeared in John Springer's "Legendary Ladies" series at The Town Hall in 1973
Awarded the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award in 1973 by the Academy for her extensive charity work
Presented her with the National Artist Award in 1974 by the American National Theater and Academy
Awarded the Life Achievement Award in 1975 by the Screen Actors Guild Awards
Hosted by First Lady Betty Ford at the White House in 1976
Honored with the Rosalind Russell Week in 1977 by Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley
Co-authored her autobiography, Life Is a Banquet, in 1977
Is the namesake of the Rosalind Russell Medical Research Center for Arthritis  at the University of California, San Francisco, created by a Congress grant in 1979
Inducted into the Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame in 2005
Ranked #28 on Premiere magazine's 100 Greatest Performances of All Time in 2006 for His Girl Friday (1940)
Honored as Turner Classic Movies Star of the Month for July 2008
Inducted in the Online Film and Television Association Film Hall of Fame in 2014
Was the subject of a 2016 exhibit at the Mattatuck Museum in her hometown
Honored by the Berlin Film Festival‘s 27-movie tribute in 2022
Has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in the 1700 block of Vine Street for motion picture
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gatutor · 10 months
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Rosalind Russell-Darren McGavin "Cómo me hice agente de la CIA" (Mrs. Pollifax-Spy) 1971, de Leslie H. Martinson.
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booksandbooklovers · 1 year
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Discovering Hidden Gems: The Top 5 Most Underrated Books You Need to Read
“The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay” by Michael Chabon — This Pulitzer Prize-winning novel tells the story of two comic book creators during the Golden Age of comic books. It is filled with rich characters and insightful commentary on the human condition. Buy your copy today!
“The Last Samurai” by Helen DeWitt — This quirky and innovative novel follows the journey of a single mother and her son as they search for a father who is the perfect man. Buy your copy today!
“The Reluctant Fundamentalist” by Mohsin Hamid — This thought-provoking novel is set in post-9/11 Pakistan and follows the story of a young man who must confront his beliefs and values in a world that is rapidly changing. Buy your copy today!
“The Amazing Mrs. Pollifax” by Dorothy Gilman — This charming mystery series follows the adventures of a septuagenarian spy as she travels the world in search of adventure and intrigue. Buy your copy today!
“The Solitude of Prime Numbers” by Paolo Giordano — This beautifully written novel is a meditation on loneliness, love, and the fragility of the human mind. Buy your copy today!
Read the full article on Medium!
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darklingichor · 2 years
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Mrs. Pollifax 1-4, by Dorothy Gilman
These are just fun!
If you have been reading this blog for any amout of time, you have probably figured out that I have a job that alternates between crazy making, annoying, and mind numbingly dull. This week was the last one, I had to keep something playing in my ears so I didn't fall asleep.
The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax
Emily Pollifax, is a widow with two grown children and a busy comfortable life. She likes people, likes to listen, but a her various volunteer positions don't really give her the opportunity to get to know people, or really help them. At a check up her doctor wonders if she is depressed, she doesn't tell him that when on the roof of her apartment building, tending her geraniums, she'd been tempted to step off, until a neighbor, terrified, told her to get away from the ledge, what if she fell?
The doctor advises her to do something she always wanted to do but never had the time for.
This plants the seed, Mrs. Pollifax had always wanted to be a spy.
She decides, there's no harm in asking, so she goes from her home in New Jersey to Washington DC and walks into the home of the CIA.
Through a small comedy of errors, she is assigned as a currior on a mission to Mexico. She is to pick up a certain book from a certain store on a certain day, other than that, she is to behave like a tourist.
Things go pear-shaped, of course, and Mrs. Pollifax and another agent find themselves held prisoner in Albainia. The rest of the book is how this whip smart, optimistic, sweet lady executes a prision break and a dash to safety.
The Amazing Mrs. Pollifax
This time our lovely Emily, is going to Istanbul to help a long time double agent get out of the country. Again, she us a corrior, she's supposed to get this person a passport and other papers. Again things don't go as planned, but because of her incredible knack for making friends is strange places, she is able to navigate kidnappings, shoot outs, murderous mobs, and a murder frame up.
The Elusive Mrs. Pollifax
Our CIA courrior is going to Bulgaria with passports in her hat, for some resistance fighters and ends up in a race against time to save a young traveler who seemed to make the wrong friends at just the wrong time.
A Palm for Mrs. Pollifax
Emily was given a "promotion" for this mission. Sent to a high end hotel/clinic in Switzerland, to find stolen plutonium. True to form, she makes friends in odd places, and uncovers a plot more devious than the CIA ever thought of.
These books were written right in the thick of the cold War, so there is a lot of communist vs. Capitalist stuff, but, no one other than those who actually hurt people are painted as villains. This person might have different ideas from Mrs Pollifax, but that doesn’t make them bad, she reserves judgement for how they behave, and a lot of people, no matter the politics, are decent and become allies.
The plots of these books are fun, the recurring characters are wonderful and the ones that are unique to each adventure are interesting.
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myrna-nora · 2 years
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2022: Books
January 1. Silent Parade (沈黙のパレード) (2018) Keigo Higashino 2. A Nun in the Closet (1975) Dorothy Gilman 3. The Maid (2022) Nita Prose 4. Rock Paper Scissors (2021) Alice Feeney 5. It's in His Kiss (2005) Julia Quinn February 6. The Chuckling Fingers (1941) Mabel Seeley 7. Untimely Death (He Should Have Died Hereafter) (1958) Cyril Hare+  8. No Exit (2019) Taylor Adams 9. Apprehend Me No Flowers (2020) Diane Vallere 10. Rules of Murder (2013) Julianna Deering + 11. The Lady's Mine (2022) Francine Rivers 12. Bats in the Belfry (1937) E.C.R. Lorac March 13. The Four Graces (1946) D.E. Stevenson 14. The Kill of it All (2022) Diane Vallere  15. The Spy Who Loved Me (1962) Ian Fleming 16. The Paris Apartment (2022) Lucy Foley 17. Nine Lives (2022) Peter Swanson April 18. The Nutmeg Tree (1937) Margery Sharp 19. A Time of Love and Tartan (2017) Alexander McCall Smith 20. Four Aunties and a Wedding (2022) Jesse Q. Sutanto ^ 21. Mrs. Pollifax Unveiled (2000) Dorothy Gilman ^ May 22. Finlay Donovan Is Killing It (2021) Elle Cosimano 23. All Creatures Great and Small (1970/1972) James Herriot 24. On the Way to the Wedding (2006) Julia Quinn ^ June 25. The Resting Place (Arvtagaren) (2020) Camilla Sten 26. Confessions (告白) (2008) Kanae Minato 27. Finlay Donovan Knocks 'Em Dead (2022) Elle Cosimano ^ 28. The Woman in the Library (2022) Sulari Gentill  29. Under Lock & Skeleton Key (2022) Gigi Pandian  30. Under Currents (2019) Nora Roberts 31. The House Across the Lake (2022) Riley Sager July 32. Miss Butterworth & the Mad Baron (2022) Julia Quinn, Violet Charles 33. Rose Cottage (1997) Mary Stewart * 34. Death in the Stocks (1935) Georgette Heyer + 35. The Swimming Pool (1952) Mary Roberts Rinehart + 36. Octopussy & the Living Daylights (1966) Ian Fleming ^ 37. The Science of Murder (Murder Isn't Easy: The Forensics of Agatha Christie) (2021) Carla Valentine August 38. The Peppermint Tea Chronicles (2019) Alexander McCall Smith 39. Spiders From Mars (2020) Diane Vallere ^ 40. Nightwork (2022) Nora Roberts 41. Parker Pyne Investigates (1934) Agatha Christie * 42. Murder Underground (1934) Mavis Doriel Hay 43. A Promise of Ankles (2020) Alexander McCall Smith 44. Till Death Do Us Part (1944) John Dickson Carr September 45. The It Girl (2022) Ruth Ware  46. A Flicker in the Dark (2022) Stacy Willingham 47. Solace Island (2017) Meg Tilly 48. Love in the Time of Bertie (2021) Alexander McCall Smith ^ 49. The Ink Black Heart (2022) Robert Galbraith ^ October 50. The Midwich Cuckoos (1957) John Wyndham 51. The Bullet That Missed (2022) Richard Osman ^ 52. A Song of Comfortable Chairs (2022) Alexander McCall Smith ^ November 53. Love Me or Grieve Me (2022) Diane Vallere ^ 54. The Couple at the Table (2022) Sophie Hannah  55. The Twist of a Knife (2022) Anthony Horowitz ^ 56. Kurashi at Home (2022) Marie Kondō December 57. Mystery in White (1937) J. Jefferson Farjeon 58. Murder for Christmas (1949) Francis Duncan 59. The Christmas Card Crime & Other Stories (2018) Martin Edwards (Editor) + read what I already own challenge ^ finished or caught-up in series * re-reads
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babysealfan · 2 years
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hi molly, I saw your tweet earlier about murder books, do you have any recs?
boy do I EVER!!!!!! excuse me for this long answer and thank you for asking for my recs xoxo!!!!
(bolding author and book names in case anyone is looking strictly for recs and doesn't care abt my ramblings lol)
obviously Gillian Flynn is the queen of thrillers and I am constantly chasing the high of reading one of her books. anyone who has not read her books needs to ASAP!!!! Sharp Objects is my favorite
I haven't read that many thrillers aside from her novels because I think she set my standards too high 😵‍💫🥴 so most of the following recs I would consider strictly mystery books and not thrillers
I was raised by Nancy Drew so I am a sucker for a good female-led mystery and I especially love ones that are like, a woman who has a regular job and just happens to stumble upon dead bodies a lot. so....
the Jenny Cain series by Nancy Pickard! Jenny is an absolute icon, I've read all 10 books in the series. some of them are better than others but I think each one is still a good mystery. if you read any of the books in this series let it be Bum Steer
I have been on the hunt for my next Nancy Drew/Jenny Cain, so please note that in the following recs, I have only read one book lol but I do plan on reading all of the books in each of these series
the Crime of Fashion series by Ellen Byerrum - a D.C.-based fashion journalist, which I'm obsessed with, I love a fun theme so the fact that these are all fashion-related (and full of interesting fashion facts) was sooo great
the Mrs. Pollifax series by Dorothy Gilman - okay so this one wasn't a murder book it was more of a spy book (though there was some spy-related murdering) and I don’t actually know if any of the other books have like a murder premise, regardless who doesn't love an elderly woman who becomes a spy
the Lilly Hawkins series by Nora McFarland - protagonist was kinda unlikable and not in the fun way and there are only 3 books in this series BUT the plot of this was sooo intriguing and I love that the entire plot happened in the span of like 24 hours
the Detective by Day series by Kellye Garrett - there are only TWO books in this series which makes me sooo sad because the first book was truly a flawless mystery to me
okay last rec I promise! 😋 the Truly Devious series by Maureen Johnson is sooo fantastic, and that's coming from a person who typically dislikes YA mysteries! the first three books are a trilogy and I devoured them and the stand-alone after that was simply amazing and there's another stand-alone coming this year!!!!! I'm v excited to watch this series grow
there are all of my recs!! and pls give me any recs you have I love book recs!!!!!
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laylainalaska · 3 years
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I love your writing so much! What are some of your favourite books?
Hello! Thank you so much! :D
Many, MANY books. Many. I read a lot, in lot of genres! (Mainly fantasy/SF, mystery, thriller/horror, and historical, with a bit of romance thrown in). And also quite a bit of nonfiction.
A few fave authors: Stephen King, Barbara Hambly, CJ Cherryh, Frances Hardinge. I buy each new book in Barbara Hambly's Ben January mysteries, Jim Butcher's Dresden Files, and Steven Brust's Dragaera series as soon as it drops - I think those are mainly the series I'm following in quite that avid a way right now. Oh, and I'm really looking forward to the 3rd book in Robert Dugoni's Charles Jenkins series - those are post-cold-war spy books!
A handful of series and individual books that I reread regularly that I can think of off the top of my head: Dark Tower, Death Gate Cycle, the Mrs. Pollifax books, Cherryh's Merchanter books, Watership Down, the Discworld books, Zelazny's Amber. I suspect that Gillian Bradshaw's Island of Ghosts (historical fiction) and Lev Grossman's Magician books will probably be that for me too, but I discovered them both so recently that I've only had time for one reread each yet!
I also find Regency romances tremendous fun, and historical mystery series, and I've read a lot of urban fantasy and paranormal romance lately, since so much of it can be had on Kindle for very cheap or free.
I hope this answers your question!
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momosandlemonsoda · 3 years
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comfort characters
I was tagged by @aurawolfgirl2000 to list my top 5 comfort characters. Thank you for the tag!
1. Bucky Barnes -- you guys, I just love him, okay? He’s been through so much and he keeps trying to be a good person and to atone for things that he had no agency in doing, and he tries to keep his dumb friend Steve alive and healthy, and he’s just ::hands:: the best.
2. Darcy Lewis -- I have read sooo much fic, good and bad, for Darcy Lewis because I love this character that fandom adopted and was like, yep, she’s ours now! She’s a little weird and off-kilter and yet extremely online and willing to tell Jane exactly like it is, and saves a dog when a giant robot from outer space tries to destroy a town. What’s not to love?
3. Similarly, Liu Sang is another character that fandom was like, oh, you have 4 stacked traumas and awkward behavior and yet you have the confidence to strip down in front of your idol and make his boyfriend feel things? Yes, we will keep him and give him all the backstories and happy endings he deserves. Also, why wasn’t he at the last party, justice for Liu Sang!!!!
4. Mercy Thompson -- I just. I love her. I haven’t always liked where the author has taken her storyline, but I’ve always loved how wise-cracking and big-hearted she is. She’s a coyote who runs with wolves and she doesn’t let anything stop her. 
5. Mrs. Emily Pollifax -- I realize this is a weird one, but I must have imprinted hard on this as a teen. Mrs. Emily Pollifax of New Brunswick, NJ, shows up at the CIA one day to apply to be a spy and, rather by accident, they take her. She’s an older widowed lady with grown-up kids, so obviously society underestimates her time and again, but she’s clever and resourceful and makes use of her lifetime of experience. The novels were written starting in the mid-60s, so they have a very naive view of American intervention and there’s definitely some period-typical racism (I cannot read the later books set in the author’s made-up African country), but overall the character herself is just a joy.
I’ve been offline enough the past few weeks that I’m going to just open it up and tag anyone who wants to play.  
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darkfinch · 3 years
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Finch, have you read any of the Mrs. Pollifax series by Dorothy Gilman? Your description of Nana's reaction to Quinn coming through the window makes me think you might enjoy some little-old-lady spy novels. 😉 (There was a movie version with Angela Lansbury that I enjoyed tremendously as a kid, but unfortunately I don't think it's available anywhere except a poor quality Youtube video. 😢)
!!!!!!! i have not!!!! oh my goodness Little Old Lady Spy Novel is a type of story i did not know i needed in my life...brb looking for these books online THANK U,
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julochka365 · 5 years
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3/6.2019 - i’m mad about mrs. pollifax
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quietbluejay · 3 years
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this is not my beautiful house Chapter 5 Reference Guide
1. I found out JUST RECENTLY that actually X-Factor headquarters is on the WEST SIDE OF MANHATTAN so let’s just chalk this up to a typical comic book error ok?
2. As teas go, Tetley isn’t actually that bad, but Laura’s a tea snob.
3. Please don’t tell me I have to explain why microwave tea is gross.  Don’t do it.
4. Bruce Banner is indeed a physicist! I’m not actually sure what he was up to in the mid 80s.
5. If you’re remotely familiar with Scarlet Witch, you know why this would be a bad idea.  If you’re not, it’s a bad idea because the chances of it backfiring and bad things happening are very high
6. Dr. Strange does indeed fight things from the Dungeon Dimensions (wait no that’s Discworld).  But yes he does contend against creatures from outside the bounds of reality.
7. Crossovers between Marvel and the ‘real world’: there have been a few!
8. ‘combo event with Tim and Jubilee’ - so, there’s a DC-Marvel crossover where Tim Drake (Robin) and Jubilee (iconic mutant of the 90s) were dating.  There is ALSO the Amalgam universe where they were merged into one person.
9.  The current X-Factor crew does rejoin the X-Men in the early 90s.
10. Leech is another mutant kid who’s going to show up a bit later in this run of X-Factor.  He and Artie were bffs.  I don’t actually know what ended up happening to them.
11. In the first book in Diane Duane’s Young Wizards series, the New York Public Library is described in detail and sounds like a very cool building.
12. The state of fantasy in the 1980s wasn’t great, no.  Ursula LeGuin had indeed published most of her stuff by ‘85.  Tamora Pierce is essentially a proto-YA feminist fantasy novelist who got her start in the 80s but her early work is rough and probably wouldn’t get published today.  Mercedes Lackey got her start in short stories, but honestly her first novel also probably wouldn’t get published today either.  Mercedes Lackey as an author I also have a bit of a love-hate relationship with, but that’s beside the point.  Mrs. Pollifax is a series of spy novels about a little old lady who works for the CIA, iirc they got started in the 60s and continued up through the 90s.
13. The unabridged Les Miserables is very long.
14. She-Hulk actually debuted in the 1970s.
15. The 1632 series is by Eric Flint (and several other authors, it’s a group project).  It’s about a small American town that gets sent through time and space to Germany in 1632.
16. Honestly when I saw the initial comics of Hank after he’d been changed back to looking like a regular human I wondered if Wolverine was making a cameo.
17. “The future is Apple” - this is an aesthetic used currently in a lot of scifi media - https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/EverythingIsAnIPodInTheFuture
18. Even the improvement in computer graphics probably isn’t an unalloyed good, honestly, given the push for more and more photorealism in video games and the effect on the video game industry.
19. The Recession of 08 and subprime mortgages: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Recession
20. Civil War shenanigans: comics Civil War, that is, which was a fight about superhero registration, but was pretty different from the MCU Civil War.  It was also a pretty universally reviled event.
21. House of M: ohhh boy where do I start.  Ok just...here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_M
22. Unfortunate art of Wanda’s twins: it’s absolutely hilarious how so many comic book artists cannot draw children.  This isn’t the one I was thinking of but it’s even better:
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dolphelecat · 5 years
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But the drawback to taking the sensible course, reflected Mrs. Pollifax, was that it so frequently diminished the people involved.
The Elusive Mrs. Pollifax by Dorothy Gilman
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Mrs Pollifax is just your normal sweet grandmother with fancy hats and a green thumb in the garden. But underneath her unassuming look, she's also a spy!
Combination of Cozy Mystery + Spy Thriller, great for a rainy afternoon with a spot of tea ☕
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DARREN MCGAVIN.
Filmography
Movie theater
1945 A Song to Remember
1945 Counter-Attack
1945 Kiss and Tell
1946 She Wouldn't Say Yes
1946 Fear
1951 Queen for a Day
1955 Summertime
1955 The Man with the Golden Arm
1955 The Court Martial of Billy Mitchell
1955 A Word to the Wives
1957 The Delicate Delinquent
1957 Beau James
1958 The Case Against Brooklyn
1964 Bullet for a Badman
1965 The Great Sioux Massacre
1966 African Gold
1967 The Virginian
1968 Mission Mars
1969 Anatomy of a Crime
1971 Mooch Goes to Hollywood
1971 Mrs. Pollifax - Spy
1973 Happy Mother's Day, Love George
1974 43: The Richard Petty Story
1976 The Demon and the Mummy
1976 No Deposit, No Return
1977 Airport '77
1978 Hot Lead and Cold Feet
1978 Zero to Sixty
1980 Hangar 18
1981 Firebird 2015 AD
1983 A Christmas Story
1984 The Natural
1985 Turk 182!
1986 Flag
1986 Raw Deal
1987 From the Hip
1988 Dead Heat
1990 In the Name of Blood
1991 Captain America
1991 Blood and Concrete
1992 Happy Hell Night
1995 Billy Madison
1996 Still Waters Burn
1996 Small Time
1999 Pros and Cons.
I work on television
1951-1952 Crime Photographer
1956-1959 Mike Hammer
1959-1961 Riverboat
1967 The Legend of Jud Star
1968-1969 The Outsider
1970 The Forty-Eight Hour Mile
1970 The Challenge
1970 The Challengers
1970 Berlin Affair
1970 Tribes
1971 Banyon
1971 The Death of Me Yet
1972 The Night Stalker
1972 Something Evil
1972 The Rookies
1972 Here Comes the Judge
1972 Say Goodbye, Maggie Cole
1973 The Night Strangler
1973 The Six Million Dollar Man
1973-1974 The Evil Touch
1974-1975 Kolchak: The Night Stalker
1976 Crackle of Death
1976 Brinks: The Great Robbery
1990 Kojak: It's Always Something
1990 Child in the Night
1990 By Dawn’s Early Light
1991 Clara
1991 Perfect Harmony
1992-1997 Miracles and Other Wonders
1992 Mastergate
1993 The American Clock
1994 A Perfect Stranger
1995 Fudge-A-Mania
1995 Derby
1997 Touched by an Angel
1999 The X-Files.
Créditos: Tomado de Wikipedia
https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darren_McGavin
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