#Vinton Hayworth
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Vinton Hayworth as Magistrado Carlos Galindo and Guy Williams as Diego de la Vega (Zorro 1957, 1x18)
#zorro#guy williams#diego de la vega#don diego de la vega#disney's zorro#my gifs#ze rewatch#zorro rewatch#vinton hayworth#magistrado galindo#digestion moves at an orderly rate#LOL#that line has always cracked me up
27 notes
·
View notes
Text
From the Golden Age of Television
The Signing of the Declaration of Independence - CBS - February 6, 1955
A presentation of "You Are There" Season Season 3 Episode 24 (It was also presented in Season 1 Episode 13 on April 26, 1953 with the same cast)
Historical Reenactment
Running Time: 30 minutes
Directed by Jack Gage
Produced by Charles W Russell
Narrated by Walter Cronkite
News Reporters:
Harry Marble
Ned Calmer
Stars:
Shepperd Strudwick as Thomas Jefferson
Addison Richards as Benjamin Franklin
Philip Coolidge as John Adams
Fred Herrick as Merchant
Frank Aletter as Quaker
Bart Burns as Loafer
Bruce Williamson as Tom
Gene Peterson as Bill
Scott Tennyson as Frontiersman
Tom McDermott as Gentleman
John Shay as Captain Graydon
Rusty Lane as Samuel Adams
Philip Abbott as Edward Rutledge
Vinton Hayworth as John Dickinson
Francis Bethencourt as John Hancock
#The Signing of the Declaration of Independence#TV#You Are There#Historical Reenactment#Walter Cronkite#1955#CBS#1950's#Shepperd Strudwick#Addison Richards#Philip Coolidge#Rusty Lane
3 notes
·
View notes
Note
Hello! Love the blog, so I wanted to ask you who some of your favorite guest stars on the show are. (As a Gilligan's Island fan, I was delighted to see Russell Johnson)
Hi! Thanks for the great question. :D
At the top of my head, I love Jack Cassidy's guest stint in the Vegas two parter. The character isn't very likeable, but I think it's a fun watch. His scenes could easily have been a chore to sit through (for me), but they're not.
I would have loved to have seen more of Jules Benedict (played by Billy De Wolfe). He's only in a few episodes, which is a shame, as I think more of him (and the workshop) had the potiential for some good stories.
As a big fan of I Dream of Jeannie, I loved seeing Vinton Hayworth (who played General Schaeffer) appear in an episode. Actually, seeing anyone who had guest starred on IDOJ make an appearance made me smile.
And of course, I can't forget to include Marlo's family. it's lovely that she was able to work with them on the show.
#if you haven't guessed i love talking about this show#so feel free to chat away with me#:)#that girl#thatgirltv#thatgirlabc#marlo thomas
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
What did Jesus do for Them what did he do for Them gave them a birthday party gave them wings and Halo healed the ones who passed away we gotta say rest in peace to them Eliahna Amyah “Ellie” Garcia 4, June 2012, Louis Joseph, Dauphin of France June 4, 1789, Larry Allen Dick Sr. DEATH 4, June 2003, Sanford M Burns 4, June 1995, William Robert “Big Will” Boatman II 4, June 2016, Lassie 4, June 1940, Dennis Weaver William Dennis Weaver 4, June 1924, Catherine Rosalind Russell 4, June 1907, George III 4, June 1738, Freddy Fender Baldemar Garza Huerta 4, June 1937, SGT Lester Ray Stone Jr.4, June 1947, Samuel Lee Gravely Jr.4, June 1922, Robert “Gorilla Monsoon” Marella c.4, June 1937, Robert Merrill 4, June 1917, Geoffrey Dyson Palmer 4, June 1927, Joseph Francis Scott 4, June 1866, Jerauld Wright 4, June 1898, Gordon Robert Tapp Gordie Tapp 4, June 1922, Stringer Davis 4, June 1899, Nan Leslie Nanette June Leslie 4, June 1926, Clara Blandick Clara Blanchard Dickey 4, June 1876, William Meade Lindsley “Billy” Fiske 4, June 1911, Christopher Morgan 4, June 1808, Constance Mary Katherine “The Apple” Applebee 4, June 1873, Charles E. Laughton 4, June 1846, George Arthur Mathews 4, June 1852, Audrey Marie Hilley Audrey Marie Frazier 4, June 1933, William Halsted 4, June 1794, Gordon Waller 4, June 1945, Carol Andrews Mary Carol Jane Dolan 4, June 1921, John Eager Howard 4, June 1752, Frances Howard Goldwyn 4, June 1903, Edward Russell Hicks 4, June 1895, Morgana King 4, June 1930, Ann Lewis 4, June 1958, Martin Parmer 4, June 1778, Vinton Hayworth 4, June 1906, Priscilla Morrill 4, June 1927, Madame Bolduc Mary Rose-Anne Travers 4, June 1894, Angela Maria “Geli” Raubal 4, June 1908, Howard Culver 4, June 1918, Jeremy Belknap 4, June 1744, William David Elliott 4, June 1921, Dr Robert Francis Furchgott, Nina Vyroubova 4, June 1916, Cardinal Pierre Eyt 4, June 1934, Benjamin Tucker Eames 4, June 1818, Italia Almirante 4, June 1890,
1 note
·
View note
Photo
Tarnished Angel (1938) Leslie Goodwins
August 14th 2022
#tarnished angel#1938#leslie goodwins#sally eilers#paul guilfoyle#ann miller#alma kruger#jonathan hale#lee bowman#vinton hayworth#sing sister#miracle racket
3 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Paul Guilfoyle, George Sanders, Wendy Barrie and Vinton Hayworth in The Saint Goes to Palm Springs (1941).
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
BARBARA EDEN
August 23, 1931
Barbara Eden was born Barbara Jean Morehead in Phoenix Arizona in 1931, although for years her birth year was thought to be 1934. It was fairly common for young actresses to lie about their age in Hollywood. After her parents divorced, her mother married a telephone lineman, the same profession as Lucille Ball’s father. Eden's first public performance was singing in the church choir. As a teenager, she sang in local bands in night clubs. At age 16, she studied singing and acting. She graduated from High School in San Francisco in the Spring Class of 1949. As Barbara Huffman, she was elected Miss San Francisco in 1951 and she also entered the Miss California pageant. Her name was changed to Eden by her first agent.
“If gentlemen prefer blondes then I'm a blonde that prefers gentlemen.” ~ Barbara Eden
Eden began her television career as a semi-regular on “The Johnny Carson Show” (not to be confused with “The Tonight Show”) in 1955.
Contrary to popular belief, "I Love Lucy” was not Eden’s first small screen appearance. She had been seen in a November 1956 episode of “West Point.”
She had also made the RKO film Back from Eternity, a remake of a Lucille Ball film called Five Came Back, which would not be released until later in 1957. It was directed by John Farrow (Mia’s father) and co-starred Keith Andes, who would play Lucy Carmichael’s boyfriend on “The Lucy Show” and co-star with Ball in Wildcat on Broadway in 1960. Eden played a college reporter and was uncredited. Coincidentally, the film also featured Tristram Coffin, who played Diana Jordan’s cousin Harry Munson in “Country Club Dance.”
In “Country Club Dance” (ILL S6;E25), the male population of Westport is all agog when sexy Diana Jordan (Barbara Eden) visits. Lucy, Ethel and Betty Ramsey decide that getting glamorous is the best revenge. The now-classic episode was filmed on March 21, 1957 and first aired on April 22, 1957.
Needless to say, that night at the Westport Country Club shapely young Diana’s ‘dance card’ is full! Pat Boone (not in attendance, but mentioned) was Diana’s favorite singer!
William Asher, the director of this episode, would later direct Barbara Eden in the short-lived sitcom "Harper Valley PTA” (1981-82) and "I Dream of Jeannie… Fifteen Years Later,” a reunion special aired in 1985.
After filming was completed, Desilu gave some of its guest stars small gifts. This 10K gold-filled Zippo lighter was a present for Eden.
That same year, Eden appeared in an episode of the Desilu sitcom “December Bride” starring Harry Morgan.
In early 1962, Eden was on the Desilu backlot to play “The Manicurist” on “The Andy Griffith Show.” At the same time, “The Lucy Show” was filming its first season.
The next time Lucy and Eden appeared on screen together was at the 1968 Primetime Emmy Awards. Ball was nominated (and won) for Best Actress in a Comedy for “The Lucy Show”. “Jeannie” and Eden were then in their third season, but failed to break the top 30 and were not nominated, although Eden, as a recognizable TV figure, was present at the awards. Throughout its long run, the popular sitcom only garnered one Emmy nomination, for Sidney Sheldon’s writing. Barbara and Ball were also presenters (not together) at the 1986 Prime Time Emmy Awards.
In 1982, Lucy and Eden were among the many women (and one man in drag) assembled for “Bob Hope’s Women I Love: Beautiful and Funny.” Coincidentally, this special also featured Mary Martin, who was Larry Hagman’s (Major Nelson on “I Dream of Jeannie”) real-life mother. Eden was a favorite of Hope’s, appearing on a dozen Bob Hope specials.
Eden was present (though she did not speak or get credited) at 1984′s “All-Star Party for Lucille Ball.” Two years later they returned for “All-Star Party for Clint Eastwood.” As a former honoree, Lucy hosted, but Eden was still only an attendee.
In 1987, Lucy and Barbara joined a myriad of luminaries for “Happy 100th Birthday Hollywood” although they performed in different segments. A year later, Lucy, in one of her final TV appearances, was with Eden in “The Princess Grace Foundation’s Special Gala Tribute to Cary Grant.” Grant never acted opposite either star.
OUT OF THE BOTTLE!
In 1965, producer Sidney Sheldon signed Eden to star in his upcoming fantasy sitcom “I Dream of Jeannie” that would air on NBC. It was aimed at wooing audiences away from ABC’s fantasy sitcom “Bewitched.” Eden played Jeannie, a beautiful genie from ancient Persia set free from her bottle by astronaut and Air Force Captain (later Major) Anthony "Tony" Nelson, played by Larry Hagman.
Also in the “Jeannie” cast of regulars was Hayden Rorke (as psychiatrist Dr. Alfred Bellows), who first appeared with Lucille Ball on stage in Dream Girl (1947).
Like Eden, Rorke also did a one-off appearance on “I Love Lucy” as new neighbor Mr. O’Brien who Lucy thinks is a spy, but turns out to be just an actor.
He would later be seen on “Here’s Lucy” as a judge deciding if Lucy Carter has held an illegal raffle or not.
Lurene Tuttle, who played the President of The Wednesday Afternoon Fine Arts League in “The Club Election” (ILL S2;E19) in 1953, played Jeannie’s mother in a 1965 episode.
Phil Ober, Vivian Vance’s ex-husband and the actor who played Dore Schary in “Don Juan is Shelved” (ILL S4;E21) in 1955, played General Stone in two season one episodes of “Jeannie.”
Vinton Hayworth, who played General Schaeffer on “Jeannie” did two films with Lucille Ball: That Girl From Paris (1936) and That’s Right - You’re Wrong (1939).
Like Vance, Eden also was married to one of her co-stars and later divorced him. In 1958, Eden married Michael Ansara, who played many roles on “Jeannie” including the Blue Djinn (above).
On “Jeannie,” Major Nelson was an astronaut. On “The Lucy Show” Lucy Carmichael was an astronaut (for a day) in a season one episode. Like “Jeannie” this episode was written to capitalize on America’s space race.
In 1971, “Here’s Lucy” also did an astronaut-themed episode. By that time, American astronauts had landed on the moon! Coincidentally, actor Robert Hogan (center in both photos) also played an astronaut on “Jeannie” in 1970.
“Jeannie” was produced by Sheldon Leonard, who played himself on a 1967 episode of “The Lucy Show”.
Like “The Lucy Show”, “Jeannie” premiered in black and white before switching to color for the remainder of its run.
Other actors who appeared on both “Jeannie” and “Lucy”: George DeNormand, Benny Rubin, Jackie Coogan, J. Pat O’Malley, Reta Shaw, Richard Reeves, Romo Vincent, Jonathan Hole, Kathleen Freeman, Bill Quinn, Herbie Faye, Milton Berle, Jack Carter, Jamie Farr, John McGiver, Richard Deacon, Don Ho, Alan Hewitt, Don Rickles, Alan Oppenheimer, Jack Collins, Parley Baer, Herb Vigran, Ruth McDevitt, Sandra Gould, Foster Brooks, James Hong, William Fawcett, Stafford Repp, and Sid Melton.
Eden played this role for five years and 139 episodes. In eight episodes, Eden donned a brunette wig to portray Jeannie's evil sister (also named Jeannie) who lusts after Tony Nelson, and in two episodes played Jeannie's hapless mother.
AFTER THE BALL & THE BOTTLE....
Barbara Eden later said in interviews that Lucy was a generous performer and caring person, contrasting to another (unnamed) female star she had worked with. Lucille Ball thought that Eden’s costume was not attractive enough, so Lucy and Irma Kusely (Lucy’s hairstylist) spent rehearsal time ‘bedazzling’ the dress. Ball offered to put Eden under contract at her Desilu Workshop, but Eden found out later that day that 20th Century Fox had picked up her option, so Eden graciously declined Lucy’s offer.
"It was the third job I had in Los Angeles and she was so good to me. I can’t tell you how sweet she was. I had a dress on that she didn’t think was outstanding enough. She asked me to take it off and the next thing I knew, she was sitting there putting sparkling things all over it, just to make it look better.” ~ Barbara Eden, October 2017
In 2005, Barbara Eden traveled to Jamestown to participate in Lucy-Desi Days.
Eden was married three times and had one child who died in 2001 at the age of 35.
“I've never stopped working. If you're active, you can appreciate what you did in the past, you don't feel like it's gone.” ~ Barbara Eden
AS OF TODAY!
AUGUST 23, 2020 - As of this writing, Barbara Eden is one of the oldest known surviving ADULT cast members of “I Love Lucy.” She is not, however, the oldest. Mary Ellen Kaye (Mrs. Taylor in “Lucy Hates To Leave”) is a year older than Eden, and Cher’s mother Georgia Holt (Model in “Lucy Gets A Paris Gown”) is 94.
There is no birth or death information for: Maggie Magennis (Starlet in “Don Juan and the Starlets”), Helen Silvers (Dancer Rosemary in “Lucy is Jealous of Girl Singer"), Barbara Logan (Stewardess in “The Ricardos Visit Cuba"), Milldred Law (Stewardess in “Return Home from Europe”), and Jody Drew (Miss Ballantine, Mr. Reilly’s Secretary in "Don Juan is Shelved").
#Lucille Ball#Barbara Eden#I Love Lucy#I Dream of Jeannie#Desi Arnaz#Hayden Rorke#Vivian Vance#Astronauts#NASA#Jeannie#Lucy#TV#sitcoms#Sheldon Leonard#The Lucy Show#Here's Lucy#Larry Hagman#Michael Ansara#Phil Ober#Robert Hogan#Dream Girl#Bob Hope#Country Club Dance#Back From Eternity#Johnny Carson#West Point#The Andy Griffith Show#December Bride#Lurene Tuttle#Vinton Hayworth
40 notes
·
View notes
Link
For just $3.99 You're Telling Me Released on May 3, 1942: A nit-wit nephew gets a job with a big radio advertising company and must convince a famous jungle explorer returning from an expedition to sign a big radio contract, but the love lives of the explorer and his expedition partner get in the way. Directed by: Charles Lamont Written by: Duane Decker, Charles O'Neil, Frances Hyland, Homer McCoy and Brenda Weisberg The Actors: Hugh Herbert Hubert Abercrombie Gumm, Anne Gwynne Kit Bellamy, Robert Paige Doctor Burnside 'Burnsy' Walker, Edward Ashley Fred Curtis, Ernest Truex Charles 'C.J.' Handley, Esther Dale Aunt Fannnie Handley, Eily Malyon Mrs. Appleby, Charles Smith Bill, mimeograph operator, Helen Lynd Miss Ames, scatterbrain secretary, Romaine Callender J.T. Dorsett, Boyd Davis Driscoll, Vickie Lester Mrs. Adalaide Parks, Linda Brent Leili, Kathryn Adams girl, Jessie Arnold unknown, Wilson Benge butler, Ralph Brooks unknown, Fritzi Brunette unknown, Vera Brunette unknown, Eddy Chandler policeman, Heinie Conklin scooter owner, Jane Cowan freckle faced kid, Kernan Cripps unknown, Ralph Dunn doorman, Jack Gardner reporter, William Haade doorman, Harry Hayden judge, Vinton Hayworth announcer, Riley Hill reporter, Olaf Hytten Fielding, personnell manager, Emmett Lynn scientist, Gertrude Mack unknown, Wilbur Mack gallant reporter, Patricia Maier girl reporter, Marie McDonald unknown, Charles McMurphy policeman, Susan Miller unknown, Frank O'Connor policeman, Nell O'Day unknown, Gene O'Donnell reporter, Charles Sherlock unknown, Grace Stafford switchboard operator, Charles Sullivan cop, Phil Tead chauffeur, Janet Warren unknown, Jan Wiley girl radio announcer Runtime: 1h 6min *** This item will be supplied on a quality disc and will be sent in a sleeve that is designed for posting CD's DVDs *** This item will be sent by 1st class post for quick delivery. Should you not receive your item within 12 working days o...
0 notes
Text
A Crying Shayne
“Okay, Shayne…get the picture. A guy in front of you with a .38, a guy in back with a rifle. And you with nothing. If wishing will make it so, you better start wishing to be somewhere else fast because- (BLAM)”
Under the pen name of “Brett Halliday,“ writer Davis Dresser introduced the world to Florida-based private eye Michael Shayne in Dividend on Death in 1939. Dresser continued the adventures of his shamus for fifty novels and hundreds of short stories before farming out his pen name to a staff of writers who kept his character in print. Unlike his contemporaries, Shayne started out as an atypical private detective; he was married, and his adventures were equal parts domestic comedy and deduction of clues. But in 1943, Mrs. Shayne met an untimely end, the laughs fell by the wayside, and Michael Shayne was reinvented as a two-fisted, hard-nosed private eye. The various radio, film, and television incarnations of the character oscillated between the two Shaynes, with some playing up the his-and-hers patter, and others doubling down on the hard-boiled intensity.
Before Shayne came to radio, he hit the big screen. Lloyd Nolan starred in a series of films for 20th Century Fox before Hugh Beaumont (Ward Cleaver himself) headlined a run for PRC. Shayne first came to radio in 1944 in a West Coast series that eventually went national in 1946. Radio character Wally Maher (heard as Sgt. Grebb on The Line-Up and as Lt. Riley on Let George Do It) starred as Shayne with Cathy Lewis as his secretary Phyllis Knight. This series focused on the lighter aspects of the character, with well-developed characterizations for Shayne and Cathy. The two would exchange flirtations as they solved their cases; imagine if Helen Asher accompanied Richard Diamond on his cases, and you’ll get the idea. The Maher series ran until November 14, 1947. When it ran its course, Shayne would be off the air for almost a year before he returned in a very different style and format, and it’s this series that is best remembered among radio fans.
The New Adventures of Michael Shayne, directed by radio veteran Bill Rousseau, came to the air in 1948 for twenty-six syndicated episodes. Rousseau had previously directed Jack Webb in the ultra-hard-boiled Pat Novak For Hire and he brought a similar tone to the revamped Shayneseries. Each episode opened with a musical barrage, ratcheting up the tension before audiences heard a tease of the story to come. Usually, it was Michael Shayne describing his latest tight spot, on the receiving end of a beating or facing down the business end of a gun. This new series uprooted Shayne from Miami and plopped him down in New Orleans. Phyllis Knight didn’t make the trip, but a rotating assortment of femme fatales and damsels in distress turned up to keep Shayne in and out of trouble. Shayne took a licking and kept on ticking; Joe Mannix may be the only fictional private eye to rival Shayne in the injury department. Rousseau’s old collaborator Jack Webb even joined the cast as Shayne’s police foil, Inspector LeFevre. And stepping into the title role was Jeff Chandler, an actor selected by Rousseau out of a field of contenders.
Chandler is well known to radio fans as bashful biology teacher (and 180 degrees away from Michael Shayne!) Philip Boynton on Our Miss Brooks, and his most famous film role as Cochise opposite Jimmy Stewart in Broken Arrow. His first film role came opposite Dick Powell in Johnny O’Clock(1947), and he was a top leading man throughout the 1950s. Sadly, his career was cut tragically short in 1961 when a botched operation for a spinal disc herniation resulted in his death at the age of 42.
It’s a shame; his performance as Michael Shayne helps to ground a series that is otherwise pretty over the top. Even throughout the beatings, the bullet wounds, the smoky dames and the snappy patter, Chandler’s Shayne is a down to earth guy with the right touch of humor behind his gritted teeth. And his years on Our Miss Brooks demonstrate his comfort with comedy and versatility as an actor. There’s no doubt he had decades of good work ahead of him, but we have 26 episodes of Michael Shayne to enjoy and celebrate the too-short life of this talented actor. Along with Jack Webb, Chandler is supported in these shows by great radio talents like Larry Dobkin, Frank Lovejoy, Hans Conried, Vivi Jannis, and more.
A 1952 - 1953 ABC series starred Donald Curtis, and later Robert Sterling and Vinton Hayworth as Shayne, but the Chandler syndicated series continued to air all across the country during this period. The Chandler episodes continued to run in several markets throughout the 1950s. Not bad for a private eye who was usually in debt, on the verge of losing his license, and nursing a head injury.
Get more old time radio detectives here!
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
Watching The Police Dog Story Online
The Police Dog Story movie download
Actors:
Vinton Hayworth Brad Trumbull Merry Anders Milton Frome Pat McCaffrie James Brown Barry Kelley Francis De Sales
Download The Police Dog Story
Cahn. True Cop Stories: Real stories by real police officers. Police Dog Stories There was a dog whose name was Dox, who helped the police force in Turin, Italy, catch criminals. Police Dog Story I - Video Police Dog Story I. The Police Dog Story Trailer, Reviews and Schedule for The. Will and Guy's Football and Dog Stories Will and Guy's Football and dog stories. The Police Dog Story (1961) - IMDb Directed by Edward L. Police Dog Attacks Footballers.. . Police deal with scary, funny, bizarre situations every day. The Police Dog in American Yet the police dog idea has been slow to take hold in this country in spite of the success of the single experiment of any consequence that has been made here.. The Police Dog Story (1961) - Photos, Images, Videos, Polls. We hear a lot about the rare. With James Brown, Merry Anders, Barry Kelley, Milton Frome. The Police Dog Story (1961) - Photos, Images, Videos, Polls, Questions, Cast and Crew - FamousWhy The Police Dog Story | Free Trailers, Plot Synopsis, Photos
hd The Six Wives of Henry Lefay Beneath film In America divx
#The Police Dog Story#Vinton Hayworth#Brad Trumbull#Merry Anders#Milton Frome#Pat McCaffrie#James Brown#Barry Kelley#Francis De Sales
0 notes
Text
Eliahna Amyah “Ellie” Garcia 4, June 2012, Louis Joseph, Dauphin of France June 4, 1789, Larry Allen Dick Sr. DEATH 4, June 2003, Sanford M Burns 4, June 1995, William Robert “Big Will” Boatman II 4, June 2016, Lassie 4, June 1940, Dennis Weaver William Dennis Weaver 4, June 1924, Catherine Rosalind Russell 4, June 1907, George III 4, June 1738, Freddy Fender Baldemar Garza Huerta 4, June 1937, SGT Lester Ray Stone Jr.4, June 1947, Samuel Lee Gravely Jr.4, June 1922, Robert “Gorilla Monsoon” Marella c.4, June 1937, Robert Merrill 4, June 1917, Geoffrey Dyson Palmer 4, June 1927, Joseph Francis Scott 4, June 1866, Jerauld Wright 4, June 1898, Gordon Robert Tapp Gordie Tapp 4, June 1922, Stringer Davis 4, June 1899, Nan Leslie Nanette June Leslie 4, June 1926, Clara Blandick Clara Blanchard Dickey 4, June 1876, William Meade Lindsley “Billy” Fiske 4, June 1911, Christopher Morgan 4, June 1808, Constance Mary Katherine “The Apple” Applebee 4, June 1873, Charles E. Laughton 4, June 1846, George Arthur Mathews 4, June 1852, Audrey Marie Hilley Audrey Marie Frazier 4, June 1933, William Halsted 4, June 1794, Gordon Waller 4, June 1945, Carol Andrews Mary Carol Jane Dolan 4, June 1921, John Eager Howard 4, June 1752, Frances Howard Goldwyn 4, June 1903, Edward Russell Hicks 4, June 1895, Morgana King 4, June 1930, Ann Lewis 4, June 1958, Martin Parmer 4, June 1778, Vinton Hayworth 4, June 1906, Priscilla Morrill 4, June 1927, Madame Bolduc Mary Rose-Anne Travers 4, June 1894, Angela Maria “Geli” Raubal 4, June 1908, Howard Culver 4, June 1918, Jeremy Belknap 4, June 1744,
1 note
·
View note
Link
For just $3.99 Released on February 2, 1940: An auto stunt car driver tries to win the big auto race with a new kind of engine after the first driver is killed in a fiery crash. Genre: Sport Duration: 1h 1min Director: Christy Cabanne Actors: Richard Arlen ('Lucky' Larry Taylor), Andy Devine (Jeffry 'Guppy' Wexel), Peggy Moran (Pat O'Shea), Vinton Hayworth (Bruce Crowley), Herbert Corthell (Pop O'Shea), Harry C. Bradley (Jones), Sandra King (June Allen), Landers Stevens (Lloyd B. Allen), John Holmes (Eddie Dodds), Jack Rice (Parker, Mr. Allen's secretary), Mary Treen (Esme the landlady), Eddy Chandler (police officer Mulligan), Harold Daniels (male secretary), Eddie Fetherston (Pete), Jack Gardner (Joe), Joe King (race commissioner), Jimmie Lucas (second mechanic), Frank Mitchell (truck driver), James C. Morton (police sergeant), Tony Paton (race driver), Ralph Arthur Roberts (race official), Fred Santley (race official), Harry Strang (first mechanic) *** This item will be supplied on a quality disc and will be sent in a sleeve that is designed for posting CD's DVDs *** This item will be sent by 1st class post for quick delivery. Should you not receive your item within 12 working days of making payment, please contact me so we can solve this or any other questions. Note: All my products are either my own work, licensed to me directly or supplied to me under a GPL/GNU License. No Trademarks, copyrights or rules have been violated by this item. This product complies with rules on compilations, international media, and downloadable media. All items are supplied on CD or DVD.
0 notes
Photo
Also heard as Michael Shayne on radio were (from top left) Wally Maher, Donald Curtis, Robert Sterling, and Vinton Hayworth.
#Michael Shayne#OTR#Wally Maher#Vinton Hayworth#Robert Sterling#Donald Curtis#Old Time Radio#Detectives#Old-Time Radio#Golden Age of Radio
2 notes
·
View notes