#eliott gould
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so many hot men lined up for this role and envisioned in this role and getting this role and for what. for what?? just because the exorcist's book said the priest was handsome???
#the exorcist 1973#i just noticed it also included paul newman and alan alda...#hawkeye pierce mash fans you already know what i mean#just so we're clear jason miller's looks and acting is part of why im obsessed with this guy so its not like it was a step down#damien karras#jason miller#al pacino#alan alda#marlon brando#eliott gould#burt reynolds#actually nvm im not tagging all of them
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New York, NY - 2/12/24 - Amelie Zilber attends the premiere of the Apple TV+ thrilling series “The New Look” at Florence Gould Hall. “The New Look” will make its global debut on Apple TV+ on Wednesday, February 14, 2024. -PICTURED: Amelie Zilber -PHOTO by: Marion Curtis / StarPix for Apple -Location: Florence Gould Hall
New York, NY - 2/12/24 - Ben Mendelsohn and Juliette Binoche attends the premiere of the Apple TV+ thrilling series “The New Look” at Florence Gould Hall. “The New Look” will make its global debut on Apple TV+ on Wednesday, February 14, 2024. -PICTURED: Ben Mendelsohn and Juliette Binoche -PHOTO by: Marion Curtis / StarPix for Apple -Location: Florence Gould Hall
New York, NY - 2/12/24 - Ben Mendelsohn, Juliette Binoche and John Malkovich attends the premiere of the Apple TV+ thrilling series “The New Look” at Florence Gould Hall. “The New Look” will make its global debut on Apple TV+ on Wednesday, February 14, 2024. -PICTURED: Ben Mendelsohn, Juliette Binoche and John Malkovich -PHOTO by: Marion Curtis / StarPix for Apple -Location: Florence Gould Hall
New York, NY - 2/12/24 - Lorenzo di Bonaventura (Exec Producer), Ben Mendelsohn and Todd A. Kessler(Creator, EP, Writer, Director) attends the premiere of the Apple TV+ thrilling series “The New Look” at Florence Gould Hall. “The New Look” will make its global debut on Apple TV+ on Wednesday, February 14, 2024. -PICTURED: Lorenzo di Bonaventura (Exec Producer), Ben Mendelsohn and Todd A. Kessler(Creator, EP, Writer, Director) -PHOTO by: Marion Curtis / StarPix for Apple -Location: Florence Gould Hall
New York, NY - 2/12/24 - Darina Al Joundi attends the premiere of the Apple TV+ thrilling series “The New Look” at Florence Gould Hall. “The New Look” will make its global debut on Apple TV+ on Wednesday, February 14, 2024. -PICTURED: Darina Al Joundi -PHOTO by: Marion Curtis / StarPix for Apple -Location: Florence Gould Hall
New York, NY - 2/12/24 - Eliott Margueruon attends the premiere of the Apple TV+ thrilling series “The New Look” at Florence Gould Hall. “The New Look” will make its global debut on Apple TV+ on Wednesday, February 14, 2024. -PICTURED: Eliott Margueruon -PHOTO by: Marion Curtis / StarPix for Apple -Location: Florence Gould Hall
New York, NY - 2/12/24 - Eliott Margueruon attends the premiere of the Apple TV+ thrilling series “The New Look” at Florence Gould Hall. “The New Look” will make its global debut on Apple TV+ on Wednesday, February 14, 2024. -PICTURED: Eliott Margueruon -PHOTO by: Marion Curtis / StarPix for Apple -Location: Florence Gould Hall
New York, NY - 2/12/24 - Maisie Williams, Ben Mendelsohn, Juliette Binoche, John Malkovich and Glenn Close attends the premiere of the Apple TV+ thrilling series “The New Look” at Florence Gould Hall. “The New Look” will make its global debut on Apple TV+ on Wednesday, February 14, 2024. -PICTURED: Maisie Williams, Ben Mendelsohn, Juliette Binoche, John Malkovich and Glenn Close -PHOTO by: Marion Curtis / StarPix for Apple -Location: Florence Gould Hall
#New york#red carpet#maisie williams#ben mendelsohn#juliette binoche#jon malkovich#glenn close#The new look#Apple TV+
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M*A*S*H (the movie - 1970) and me
M*A*S*H (the movie – 1970) and me
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#"Hot Lips"#"Hot Lips" Houlihan#Alan Alda#antiwar films#CBS#Col. Henry Blake#Donald Sutherlin#Duke Forrest#Eliott Gould#ensemble cast#Frank Burns#futility of war#Gary Burghoff#Korean War#Larry Linville#Loretta Swit#M*A*S*H#Major Margaret Houlihan#MASH#MASH (1970) film#MASH TV show#misogyny#movie reviews#Movies#movies of 1970#Norman Lear#racism#Radar O&039;Reily#Richard Hooker#Robert Altman
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but now that you are (finally) in your george segal era when are you going to watch him be vaguely gay with eliott gould in that robert altman movie🪤
I’m not REALLY in my George segal era (proof: I didn’t tag his name when I reviewed no way to treat a lady or king rat on letterbox) so your little cheese trap will not work on me
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eliott gould? dustin hoffman? sam waterson?
Ooh waterson definitely has grandpa energy!!
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Jim and I had date night last night, thanks to the Merchants of Speedway: videos and popcorn from Casa Video, wine from Rum Runner, and pizza from Fresco Pizza. Casa Video lets you keep movies for two weeks now, so Jim picked up five movies and two boxes of popcorn. We watched this dark comedy About a butcher (Woody Allen) who kills his cheating wife, chops her up and buries her body parts in the desert along the border. The story of miracles, faith, sex and murder unfolds when a blind woman finds the hand in the desert, believes it is the hand of the Virgin Mary and her sight is restored. David Schwimmer is the town priest who has lost his faith and is shocked by the miracles. Eliott Gould, Cloris Leachman and Andy Dick play emissaries from the Vatican who travel to NM to verify the miracles. Check it out. Casa Video has a way better selection of movies than Netflix. @ld9democrats #casavideo #casavideotucson #laugh #laughteristhebestmedicine #shoplocal #staysafe (at Tucson, Arizona) https://www.instagram.com/p/CEehQKsBzss/?igshid=fwgtd1ilzgd5
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A HOME IS NOT AN OFFICE
S5;E4 ~ October 2, 1972
Directed by Coby Ruskin ~ Written by Fred S. Fox and Seaman Jacobs
Synopsis
Harry finds he can't run the office efficiently with Lucy at home with a broken leg, so he brings the office to Lucy's home causing Lucy to resort to some elaborate schemes to get him to leave.
Regular Cast
Lucille Ball (Lucy Carter), Gale Gordon (Harrison Otis Carter), Lucie Arnaz (Kim Carter)
Guest Cast
Susan Tolsky (Miss Quigley) is probably best remembered for playing Biddie Coom on the TV series “Here Comes the Brides��� (1968-70). Tolsky played Kim's friend and neighbor Sue Ann in “Kim Finally Cuts You-Know-Whose Apron String” (S4;E24), a possible spin-off that was not picked-up for production. This is her last appearance on “Here's Lucy.”
Miss Quigley is said to be the fourth substitute secretary Harry has had since Lucy broke her leg.
Mary Jane Croft (Mary Jane, above left) played Betty Ramsey during season six of “I Love Lucy. ” She also played Cynthia Harcourt in “Lucy is Envious” (ILL S3;E23) and Evelyn Bigsby in “Return Home from Europe” (ILL S5;E26). She played Audrey Simmons on “The Lucy Show” but when Lucy Carmichael moved to California, she played Mary Jane Lewis, the actor’s married name and the same one she uses on all 31 of her episodes of “Here’s Lucy. Her final acting credit was playing Midge Bowser on “Lucy Calls the President” (1977). She died in 1999 at the age of 83.
Vanda Barra (Vanda, above center) makes one of over two dozen appearances on “Here’s Lucy” as well as appearing in Ball’s two 1975 TV movies “Lucy Gets Lucky” (with Dean Martin) and “Three for Two” (with Jackie Gleason). She was seen in half a dozen episodes of “The Lucy Show.” Barra was Lucille Ball’s cousin-in-law by marriage to Sid Gould.
Gloria Wood (Doris, in black) was one of the off-stage back-up singers in “Lucy and Rudy Vallee” (S3;E12) and will do one more episode of the series, also singing.
Peggy Clark (June, in violet) began singing as the Clark Kiddies lead singer. She was later part of The Sentimentalists. She was a very busy studio singer for decades in Los Angeles, heard on TV, film, records and commercials. Gwenn Johnson (Mercedes, in floral print) is making her only screen appearance here.
Doris, June, and Mercedes (along with Mary Jane and Vanda) are members of Lucy's Canary Club, an a cappella singing group. They are not individually identified by name except in the final credits. They have no dialogue other than their group singing.
Robert Carson (Officer Hurlow, Police Officer) was a busy Canadian-born character actor who appeared on six episodes of “The Lucy Show.” This is the fifth and final appearance on “Here’s Lucy.”
The surname Hurlow was used as the name of the driving instructor (Jack Gilford) in “Lucy Helps Craig Get a Driver’s License” (S1;E24) and the nurse (Mary Wickes) in “Lucy and Harry's Tonsils” (S4;E6).
Sid Gould (Sam / Jerry) made more than 45 appearances on “The Lucy Show” and nearly as many on “Here’s Lucy.” Gould (born Sydney Greenfader) was Lucille Ball’s cousin by marriage to Gary Morton. He is married to Vanda Barra (Vanda).
For the role, Gould wears dark glasses and a false mustache, perhaps so that he looks noticeably different to Harry, who might recognize him from the office coffee shop. Kim tells her mother that “Sam from the coffee shop is ready” but the name Jerry is listed in the final credits and never spoken aloud during the scene.
Phil Vandervort (Tommy) appeared in two episodes of “The Lucy Show” where he met Lucie Arnaz. The two were married from 1971 to 1977. This is third and final episode of the series.
For the role, Vandervort wears a false beard and wire-framed eyeglasses. Harry says he looks like he crawled out of the woodwork.
Emile Autuori (Mr. Munson, Painter) makes his fifth and final appearance on “Here’s Lucy.” He passed away in early 2017. He was the uncle of writer / director P.J. Castalleneta.
In his introduction to the episode on the series DVD, Autuori says that his sister, Theresa Autuori Price, was Gary Morton's secretary at the time. Munson was also the surname of Grace and Harry, characters who appear on “I Love Lucy.”
Orwin C. Harvey (Painter, uncredited) was an actor and stuntman who played one of the singing and dancing teamsters in “Lucy Helps Ken Berry” (TLS S6;E21). This is one of his six appearances on “Here’s Lucy.”
Bob Harks (Mover, uncredited) was born on September 20, 1927. Harks appeared in his first film in 1968 and was seen in the background of Mame (1974). In 1970 he popped up on his first television show and was seen in more than a dozen episodes of “Here's Lucy.” He died at age 83 in 2010.
Hank Robinson (Mover, uncredited) was a busy background player in Hollywood seen on such shows as “Kojak,” “The Rockford Files,” and “Gunsmoke.” This is his last appearance on “Here’s Lucy.”
The other movers and painters are played by uncredited background performers.
This is the series' 100th episode! It is the first of only a few episodes not to have a personal name in the title.
This episode is the fourth installment in the longest story arc (Lucy’s broken leg) of the series. This storyline was dictated by the fact that Lucille Ball actually broke her leg skiing, necessitating scripts for the first half of season five be tailored to her being in a cast.
The evening this episode first aired, Susan Tolsky (Miss Quigley) also appeared on CBS's “The New Bill Cosby Show.” Tolsky was a regular on the variety show, which lasted just one season. That evening the show also featured insult comic Don Rickles, who had played a washed-up boxer on a 1967 episode of “The Lucy Show.”
The evening this episode first aired, Lucie Arnaz guest-starred on “Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In” which aired on NBC the hour prior to “Here’s Lucy.” Desi Arnaz Jr. had also appeared on the madcap variety show in 1970. “Laugh-In” was frequently referenced on “Here’s Lucy” during its first two seasons. Initially, “Laugh-In’s” second half hour on NBC overlapped “Here’s Lucy” on CBS.
Harry is looking for the file for the Charles Bradshaw account. Lucy filed it under 'G' because Mr. Bradshaw reminds her of Cary Grant. Grant was frequently mentioned on all of Lucille Ball's sitcoms. The name Bradshaw was often one used by Gale Gordon in his dictation directives as both Mr. Mooney and Harrison Carter.
Lucy is the head of the Canary Club, a group of a cappella women singers consisting of Mary Jane, Vanda, Doris, June, and Mercedes. They give her the “Humpty Dumpty Award” for skiing which cost the members (including Lucy) $2.50 each. The figurine has red hair and a cast on her right leg, just like Lucy.
To welcome Lucy home, the Canary Club sings “Hello, Lucy” to the tune of “Hello, Dolly.” The song is by Jerry Herman who also wrote the music for Mame, which Lucy was about to start filming when she broke her leg. In its original form the song is from a Broadway musical of the same name based on Thornton Wilder's play The Matchmaker. In “Lucy and the Undercover Agent” (TLS S4;E10, above) it was sung as “Hello, Solly” when Lucy Carmichael dressed up as Carol Channing (Broadway's original Dolly) to get into an Army base. First, she had to distract “Sol” (aka “Solly”) the base guard.
Lucy tells her daughter she’s never had a song written for her before. For Lucille Ball, that is just not true. The theme song to “I Love Lucy” by Eliott Daniel was written for her (as Lucy Ricardo). The statement is also not true for Lucie Arnaz. Her father and composer Eddie Maxwell wrote “There’s a Brand New Baby in Our House” for the birth of Lucie in 1951. It was re-released to coincide with the birth of Little Ricky / Desi Jr. in 1953. So although the Carter gals may not have had songs written for them, the Arnaz girls have!
According to the back of their coveralls, the moving men are from Dart Movers.
Lucy is surprised she is no longer Harry's candidate for “Miss Boo-Boo of Nineteen Seventy Two-Two.” In order that episodes not seem 'dated', the year was rarely spoken in the dialogue of “Lucy” shows, especially considering their popularity in syndication.
The framed photograph of Gale Gordon seen in many previous episodes of “Here's Lucy” and “The Lucy Show” has been hung in Lucy's living room, although it is not usually part of the office set.
Lucy says that having Harry doing business in her home is like having a rest cure at Devil's Island. Devil’s Island (aka Bagne de Cayenne) was a penal colony in French Guiana. It was previously mentioned in “Lucy's Bonus Bounces” (S4;E16) and on “I Love Lucy” in “Paris at Last” (ILL S5;E18).
When Kim suggests giving the office furniture to the Salvation Army, Lucy says “Harry has spies there. That's where he gets his clothing.” Lucille Ball was a supporter of The Salvation Army.
The charitable organization was indirectly satirized on “I Love Lucy” as The Friends of the Friendless and in “Lucy Moves To NBC” with Lucy playing Sister Hitchcock, a character on “The Music Mart”.
To drive Harry away, the Canary Club sing “Camptown Races.” "Camptown Races" is a minstrel song by Stephen Foster (1826–64) published in 1850.
Upon seeing the room turned into a place of business, Kim sings “Be it ever so humble...” then drops the song and flatly states “there’s no place like an office.” The 19th century song “Home Sweet Home” was composed by Englishman Sir Henry Bishop with lyrics by American actor John Howard Payne.
Harry starts to dictate a letter to Mr. Frank S. Leach, Fayetteville, Arkansas. This is the name of an old World War II Army buddy of writer Seaman Jacobs. The two kept correspondence over the years and Jacobs wanted to surprise his friend with his name being spoken on television. When CBS legal department checked they found there were two people named Frank S. Leach in Fayetteville, Arkansas, and suggested the name be changed to Frank S. Larson. Jacobs wrote to his friend to sign a release, which allowed the name to be used. On filming day, however, Gale Gordon had trouble pronouncing the name Leach, so Jacobs informed him of the reason it was so important to him that he get it right. Gordon got the name right, but then mispronounced Fayetteville as Fayettesville. The extra 's' was later removed in post-production.
Harry says he didn't think the painters were interns from “Medical Center,” a CBS hospital drama that aired from 1969 to 1976 on Wednesday nights.
At the end of the episode, Harry gets wet – this time soaked in yellow paint.
Lucy Ricardo also had a broken leg and used a wheelchair in 1953's “The Girls Go Into Business” (ILL S3;E2). Both episodes also feature police officers.
Miss Quigley (Susan Tolsky) tells Harry that at secretarial school she learned typing, shorthand, and Karate (to defend herself). Susan Tolsky previously played Sue Ann on “Kim Cuts You-Know-Whose Apron String” (S4;E24), an episode that was centered around Kim and Sue Ann learning self-defense from a book.
Character Clarity! Standing in the living room/office, Harry tells Kim to “go home.” Kim calls it “her mother's house.” It can be assumed this means Kim is still living in the Marina Del Rey apartment that she moved into in “Kim Finally Cuts You-Know-Whose Apron String” (S4;E24), although is not specifically stated. It also could mean that Kim is staying at the college dorm, as was hinted in “Harrison Carter, Male Nurse” (S5;E3).
“Miss Quigley, in this letter you just typed up for me...” - The camera catches a quick glimpse of the ‘letter’ and it is obviously bold handwriting, not typing. It is likely a portion of the script in order to remind Gale Gordon of his lines. Reports from the set by writer Seaman Jacobs confirm that Gordon did not always perform the script word for word.
Bad...Worse...________! Of the three previous substitute secretaries he has had, Harry says that Miss Quigley is the “worse-est.” When Quigley differs, she says “I don’t think there’s such word as “worstest”. It is unclear whether the original script said “worse-est” or “worstest” (both are grammatically incorrect), but traditionally, for consistency sake, if an actor makes an error of this sort, their scene partner should repeat the word spoken, not the scripted word.
Brand X - Lucy’s manual typewriter has the brand name redacted with blue tape. This is the same typewriter she will use a year later in “The Big Game” (S6;E2).
“A Home is Not an Office” rates 3 Paper Hearts out of 5
This is a sprawling episode, with lots of characters and activity. Although restricted to a wheelchair, Lucille Ball still manages some funny physical comedy with a feisty file cabinet. Ball appears to be happy to be back in her element and enjoying the company of her co-stars. There are also some sweetly sentimental moments between Harry and Lucy.
#Here's Lucy#Lucille Ball#Gale Gordon#Lucie Arnaz#Home Office#Mary Jane Croft#Vanda Barra#Sid Gould#Susan Tolsky#Gloria Wood#Peggy Clark#Gwenn Johnson#Robert Carson#Phil Vandervort#Orwin C. Harvey#Hank Robinson#The New Bill Cosby Show#Cary Grant#The Salvation Army#Hello Dolly#Camptown Races#Devil's Island#Frank S. Leach#Medical Center#Broken Leg#Wheelchair#Karate#Secretary#100th Episode#TV
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The Long Goodbye (5/10) Movie CLIP - Walter Brennan (1973) HD
I saw this movie three years ago, and this is a scene I remember now and then. It’s one of the funniest scene I’ve seen in my whole movie-eater life.
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MASH
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Denise Crosby as Deb Goldman in Ray Donovan
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The Long Goodbye (1973)
#the long goodbye#le privé#robert altman#eliott gould#raymond chandler#philip marlowe#film#film photography
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On the set of "Mash"
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Eliott Gould e Barbra Streisand
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Eliott Gould, Le Privé.
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Sitting in a tree
Eliott Gould und Barbra Streisand.
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