#john boles charles farrell
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John Boles and Charles Farrell in a publicity still for Fazil (1928)
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THE 100 GREATEST SCREEN-PAIRS IN HISTORY OF WORLD CINEMA (@INDIES)!
.RAJESH KHANNA - MUMTAZ
.WALTER PIDGEON – GREER GARSON
.HUMPHREY BOGART – INGRID BERGMAN
.RICHARD BURTON – ELIZABETH TAYLOR
.ETHAN HAWKE – JULIE DELPY
.CHARLES CHAPLIN – EDNA PURVIANCE
.HUGH GRANT – JULIA ROBERTS
.KEANU REEVES – CARRIE-ANN MOSS
.RICHARD GERE - JULIA ROBERTS
.REX HARRISON – AUDREY HEPBURN
.CHARLES FARRELL – JANET GAYNOR
.CLARK GABLE – VIVIEN LEIGH
.UTTAM KUMAR – SUCHITRA SEN
.ROBERT REDFORD – BARBRA STREISAND
.DEV ANAND – WAHEEDA REHMAN
.CARY GRANT – INGRID BERGMAN
.KEANU REEVES – SANDRA BULLOCK
.GARY COOPER – INGRID BERGMAN
.JOSEPH FIENNES – GWYNETH PALTROW
.CHARLES BOYER – INGRID BERGMAN
.CARY GRANT – KATHERINE HEPBURN
.GURU DUTT – WAHEEDA REHMAN
.RAJESH KHANNA - TANUJA
.DILIP KUMAR - MADHUBALA
.TOM HANKS – MEG RYAN
.RAJESH KHANNA – SHARMILA TAGORE
.HUGH GRANT – RENEE ZELLWEGER
.SPENCOR TRACY – KATHERINE HEPBURN
.AMITABH BACHCHAN – PARVEEN BABI
.MICHEL PICCOLI – ROMY SCHNEIDER
.WOODY ALLEN – DIANE KEATON
.RAJESH KHANNA – REKHA
.MICHAEL DOUGLAS – GLENN CLOSE
.ALAIN DELON – ROMY SCHNEIDER
.ROD STEIGER – ROMY SCHNEIDER
.SHAMMI KAPOOR – ASHA PAREKH
.MARCELO MASTROIANNI – ROMY SCHNEIDER
.YVES MONTAND – SIMONE SIGNORET
.ALAIN DELON – ANNIE GIRARDOT
.JOHNNY DEPP – JULIETTE BINOCHE
.LAURENCE OLIVIER – VIVIEN LEIGH
.CLARK GABLE – JOAN CRAWFORD
.TREVOR HOWARD – CELIA JOHNSON
.PATRICK SWAYZE – JENNIFER GREY
.PREM NAZIR - SHEELA
.VINCENT CASSEL – MONICA BELLUCCI
.CLARK GABLE – AVA GARDNER
.JEAN-LOUIS TRINTIGNANT – ROMY SCHNEIDER
.JACK LEMMON – SHIRLEY MACLAINE
.HEATH LEDGER - JULIA STILES
.ANTHONY PERKINS – INGRID BERGMAN
.TOBEY MAGUIRE – KIRSTEN DUNST
.GREGORY PECK – AUDREY HEPBURN
.TOM CRUISE – RENEE ZELLWEGER
.AMITABH BACHCHAN - REKHA
.JAMES STEWART – MARGARET SULLAVAN
.RYAN GOSLING – RACHEL MCADAMS
.PRADEEP KUMAR – MEENA KUMARI
.ROBERT MONTGOMERY – ROSALIND RUSSELL
.JOHNNY DEPP – HELENA BONHAM CARTER
.BOBBY VERNON – GLORIA SWANSON
.DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS JR. – LORETTA YOUNG
.CLARK GABLE – CLAUDETTE COLBERT
.RAJESH KHANNA – ZEENAT AMAN
.GLENN FORD – GERALDINE PAGE
.LEONARDO DI CAPRIO – KATE WINSLET
.RAJESH KHANNA – ASHA PAREKH
.MEL GIBSON – CATHERINE MCCORMACK
.RAJ KAPOOR - NARGIS
.BRAD PITT – ANGELINA JOLIE
.CHRISTOPHER REEVE – MARGOT KIDDER
.CARY GRANT – SOPHIA LOREN
.SOUMITRA CHATTERJEE – MADHABI MUKHERJEE
.HUMPHREY BOGART – AUDREY HEPBURN
.SALMAN KHAN – AISHWARYA RAI
.ANTONIA BANDERAS – CATHERINE ZETA JONES
.RYAN O’ NEAL – BARBRA STREISAND
.JOHNNY DEPP – GWYNETH PALTROW
.MICHAEL DOUGLAS – KATHLEEN TURNER
.JAMES STEWART – CLAUDETTE COLBERT
.LAURENT MALET – ANNIE GIRARDOT
.DICK POWELL – OLIVIA DE HAVILLAND
.TOMMY STEELE – GERALDINE PAGE
.GEORGE BRENT – OLIVIA DE HAVILLAND
.MAURICE RONET – BRIGITTE BARDOT
.RAJESH KHANNA - SRIDEVI
.WILLIAM POWELL – MYRNA LOY
.ANTHONY PERKINS – ROMY SCHNEIDER
.MICKEY ROONEY – JUDY GARLAND
.RAJESH KHANNA - RAAKHEE
.SHAH RUKH KHAN - KAJOL
.RAAJ KUMAR – MEENA KUMARI
.MAHIPAL – ANITA GUHA
.RALPH FIENNES – JULIETTE BINOCHE
.ERROL FLYNN – OLIVIA DE HAVILLAND
.JOHN BOLES – BARBARA STANWYCK
.DHARMENDRA – MEENA KUMARI
.PETER FINCH – AUDREY HEPBURN
.MARLON BRANDO – KIM HUNTER
.MAURICE RONET – ROMY SCHNEIDER .
(P.S. - THE 2 PEOPLE WITH MOST ENTRIES IN THIS LIST, ARE-
RAJESH KHANNA OF INDIA WITH 8 ENTRIES, FOLLOWED BY ROMY SCHNEIDER OF AUSTRIA/FRANCE WITH 7 ENTRIES!)
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Rory Calhoun
Phillips Holmes
Robert Taylor
Steve Cochran
John Boles
Charles Farrell
THANKS~
You're very welcome!
They've been added and will be posted in the near future.
💖
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HOLLYWOOD WITHOUT MAKE-UP
1963
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Produced by Ken Murray
Music by George Stoll
Written by Royal Foster
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Ken Murray (Himself, Host) is billed as “the man who makes movies of the people who make movies.” He was born Kenneth Abner Doncourt in 1903 to vaudevillian parents. Murray got his start in show business on the stage in 1920s as a stand-up comedian. He performed his comedy act on the vaudeville circuit. He found success as a stage performer after appearing in Earl Carroll's Vanities on Broadway in 1935. In the 1940s, Murray became famous for his Blackouts, a racy, stage variety show at the El Capitan Theatre in Hollywood. The Blackouts played to standing-room-only audiences for 3,844 performances, ending in 1949. Later that year, the show moved to Broadway and closed after six weeks. He made his film debut in the 1929 romantic drama Half Marriage, followed by a role in Leathernecking in 1930. He was also the host of “The Ken Murray Show,” a weekly music and comedy show on CBS Television that ran from 1950 to 1953. The show was the first to win a Freedom Foundation Award. Over the course of his career, Murray filmed Hollywood celebrities using his 16mm home movie camera. He began filming the footage to send back home to his grandparents in lieu of writing letters. His grandmother saved the footage, which Murray later used in compilation films like Hollywood Without Make-Up. He died in 1988 at age 85.
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Features footage of: Eddie Albert, June Allyson, George K. Arthur, Mary Astor, Lew Ayres, Max Baer, Lucille Ball, Richard Barthelmess, Rex Bell, Edgar Bergen, Sally Blane, Humphrey Bogart, John Boles, Pat Boone, Eddie Borden, Hobart Bosworth, Clara Bow, William Boyd, Fanny Brice, Paul Brooks, Joe E. Brown, Johnny Mack Brown, Virginia Bruce, Polly Burson, Rory Calhoun, Leo Carrillo, Charles Chaplin, Lew Cody, William Collier Jr., Russ Columbo, Gary Cooper, Jackie Cooper, Jeanne Crain, Robert Cummings, Linda Darnell, Marion Davies, Joan Davis, Olivia de Havilland, Dolores del Rio, Cecil B. DeMille, Jack Dempsey, Walt Disney, Kirk Douglas, Marie Dressler, Irene Dunne, Josephine Dunn, Stuart Erwin, Ruth Etting, Douglas Fairbanks, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Charles Farrell, Todd Fisher, Errol Flynn, Joan Fontaine, Glenn Ford, Clark Gable, Greta Garbo, Reginald Gardiner, Cary Grant, Alan Hale, Oliver Hardy, William Randolph Hearst, Jean Hersholt, William Holden, Bob Hope, Hedda Hopper, Walter Huston, Sam Jaffe, Van Johnson, Buck Jones, Hope Lange, Charles Laughton, Stan Laurel, Gertrude Lawrence, Mervyn LeRoy, Charles Lindbergh, Carole Lombard, William Lundigan, Fred MacMurray, Jayne Mansfield, George Marshall, Herbert Marshall, Chico Marx, Groucho Marx, Harpo Marx, Joel McCrea, Victor McLaglen, Adolphe Menjou, Mayo Methot, Marilyn Monroe, Frank Morgan, Wayne Morris, Jean Parker, Louella Parsons, Mary Pickford, Dick Powell, Tyrone Power, George Raft, Gregory Ratoff, Donna Reed, Debbie Reynolds, Buddy Rogers, Charles Ruggles, Albert Schweitzer, George Seaton, Norma Shearer, George Stevens, Lewis Stone, Margaret Sullavan, Robert Taylor, William T. Tilden, George Tobias, Spencer Tracy, Lupe Velez, Jimmy Walker, John Wayne, Johnny Weissmuller, Mae West, Claire Windsor, Robert Woolsey, Jane Wyman, and others.
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The show is also available on DVD from Sprocket Flicks It has been aired on TV on Turner Classic Movies.
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In 1963, when this documentary was released, Lucille Ball was starting her second season of “The Lucy Show” on CBS TV.
In June 1950, one year before “I Love Lucy” premiered, Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz were guests on “The Ken Murray Show” on CBS TV. Tap dancer Bunny Briggs and 'Little Rascal' Darla Hood were also guests.
In 1966, Lucy and Murray were both guests on “Bob Hope's Leading Ladies.” Murray played a television executive named Harvey Sarnoff. Lucy played herself. Sort of.
Lucy returned to Sun Valley to film an episode of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour,” using the same locations scene in this documentary.
Twenty minutes into the documentary, the location turns to Sun Valley, Idaho, where Hollywood stars went for winter sports. June Allyson, Errol Flynn, Martha O'Driscoll, Johnny Weissmuller, Wayne Morris, and Reggie Gardiner have a snowball fight while making a snowman.
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Lounging at the Lodge are Rory Calhoun (center) and Lucille Ball. Sun Valley was one of the Arnaz's favorite vacation spots, accessible by train from Hollywood. Desilu would film “Lucy Goes To Sun Valley” (1958) there. Lucy's good friend Ann Sothern also loved Sun Valley, and is buried nearby.
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Murray says that this is not the only home movies of Lucille Ball that he has. First is a quick clip of Lucy at Chatsworth Ranch with one of her cherished dogs. Lucy and Desi had three dogs at the time.
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This leads to footage of Lucille Ball filming Fancy Pants in 1950 with director George Marshall and co-star Bob Hope. Murray also mentions that Lucy has done quite a few pictures with Hope, including Critic's Choice, which was released in 1963, the same year as this documentary. In 1969, when Lucy wanted to film episodes of “Here's Lucy” on location, including on the Colorado River, she hired Marshall, remembering his expertise with location filming in rough terrain.
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Ball also poses with Marshall and her Fancy Pants stunt double, Polly Burson, although Murray does not specifically mention her name.
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Ball is shown doing a stunt where she falls onto a break-away table, not once...
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not twice...
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but three times!
Murray: “Someone once said that Lucille Ball stands alone as the greatest comedienne of our time. That goes for sitting down, too!”
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Lucy Without Make-Up: Literally!
A movie star, Lucille Ball was rarely scene without full make-up, but when a scene demanded she take a blast of water to the face, she removed her false eyelashes, as she did here in “Never Do Business With Friends” (ILL S2;E31) in 1953.
#Hollywood Without Make-Up#Ken Murray#Lucille Ball#George Marshall#Bob Hope#Fancy Pants#Rory Calhoun#Polly Burson#I Love Lucy#The Lucy Show#George Stoll#Royal Foster#1963#Sun Valley#Sprocket Films#DVD#TCM#documentary#The Ken Murray Show
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John Boles and Charles Farrell in an original publicity still for Fazil (1928)
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Fazil John Boles and Charles Farrell in Fazil (1928).
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