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Everything posted by MilesArcher
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The Great Lie? Mary Astor?
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Are you Dina Merrill?
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Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger Nick Nolte Achieved Early Fame In The Mini-Series "_______ Man, Poor Man" A Sliver Of Broken Glass Is Called A __________ Hall Of Fame Ball Player Hornsby "Me ______ My Shadow" The Emerald City Is In The Land Of ______ She Wrote "Please, Don't Eat The Daisies" "My Heart Beat Like A __________, My Arms Wound Around You Tight, And Stars Fell On Alabama Last Night" + He Composed The Music For "Gypsy"
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Waters My last one was not Brooks. Who is Nick Brooks? I gave three names so that there wouldn't be much chance of another answer. Richard was a bald character actor who made a living playing sarcastic authority figures on TV comedies, Lesley is on TV almost every Sunday, and Nick is a young actor who was featured in a movie with the present California governor.
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Burt Bacharach and Hal David The King In "Camelot" With The Emancipation Proclamation, Lincoln _________ The Slaves Minnie _______ Moskowitz In Parliamentary Procedure, A No Vote Is A _______ Military Abbreviation For Commanding Officer Leader Of The Tijuana Brass Randolph Scott's Producer Partner Was Harry Joe _________
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Maureen O'Sullivan - Former Mother-In-Law Jason Miller
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I believe you are going for the name Boone, although Richard and Pat were cousins. What, you can't see the family resemblance? Also, sometimes there is more than one correct answer to these names. Earlier, I posted Buddy, Fred, and Jean. The answer that was posted was Clark. I was unaware of Jean Clark, but there is an actress with that name. I was thinking of the name Rogers, Buddy, the actor and bandleader, Fred, the "neighborhood" guy on PBS, and Jean, the actress best known for the Flash Gordon serials. Now: Richard, Lesley, and Nick No, it's not Boone this time
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Could it be "What Price Hollywood" in 1932 and the 1954 version of "A Star Is Born", both directed by George Cukor?
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Edgar Bergen, Charlie McCarthy, and Mortimer Snerd - Congratulations, Eve. I could never figure out a clue for Mortimer Snerd when I posted Bergen and McCarthy some months ago. Frank Sinatra Sang "Don't Give Up Too Soon, If You Stub Your ______ On The Moon" Former Presidential Candidate Fred Dalton Thompson Played President Grant In "Bury My Heart At Wounded ______" In "Tarzan And His Mate", Paul Cavanagh Played __________ "Thank You For Your Support" Was The Catch Phrase In Commercials For Bartles ______ James Heston And Loren Starred In "El _______" She Had A Hit With "Gypsies, Tramps, and Thieves" She Had A Hit With "Don't You Know?"
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Holly Buddy, Fred, and Jean
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Burke Robert, Roland, and Alan
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Irving Thalberg - Brother-In-Law Tina Sinatra
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I understand you're dancing the "Cheek To Cheek" number in the local production Of "Top Hat".
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Huntz Hall and Leo Gorcey In Song, 42nd Street Is "That Crazy Quilt That Wall Street "_______" Built A Gershwin Tune Contains The Line "Although He May Not Be The Man Some Girls Think Of As Handsome, To My Heart He'll Carry The _______" Gene Autry Sang "Then How The Reindeer Loved Him, As They Shouted Out With ________" In "Swing Time", Ginger Sang To Fred, "Work Like A Soul Inspired, Till The Battle Of The Day Is Done, You May Be Sick And Tired, But You'll Be A Man, My _______" Perry Como Crooned "_______ I Love You So" Nat "King" Cole Sang "Are You Warm, Are You Real, Mona Lisa, Or Just A Cold And Lonely, Lovely Work Of _______?" Rose Royce Sang "Workin' At The _______ Wash" + Al Jolson Sang "Climb Upon My ________, Sonny Boy" If you know song lyrics, this will be easy. If you don't, well, ask an old person!
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Leon Trotsky - Uncle Kathryn Grant
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Boyd David, Norm, and Mary Frances
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Could it be Lorinda and Gyl Roland, daughters of Constance Bennett and Gilbert Roland?
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Bailey Wasn't it Frankie LYMON and Arthur LYMAN? Slightly different spellings. Now: Mary and Regis
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Yes, it's Trigger. I guess I made it too easy with those last clues. If you have followed some of my old posts, you may have known that Olivia DeHavilland rode through Sherwood Forest on Trigger In 'The Adventures Of Robin Hood". My clue about being dead, but not really gone, was a reference to the fact that Roy Rogers had Trigger stuffed and put on display in his museum on California. I left out some clues like Trigger having natural blonde hair and being a vegetarian, or doing a scene in a movie where he shared a bed with Bob Hope, as he did in "Son Of Paleface". Oh well, I'll save those for another time. Now, finance, it's your turn.
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Thanks, finance. Here's one some of you may know. I was never a top star, but I was well known. I was a supporting player for my entire career. In fact, some might consider me the ultimate supporting player. One of my first movies was an "A" list film where I worked with a young Olivia DeHavilland. Shortly after that, I moved to another studio where I became closely associated with an actor whose career in westerns was just about to take off, and I was a big part of his success. Over the years, we made dozens and dozens of westerns. I didn't just get by on my looks, although some think that I could have. I did most of my own stunts. By the early fifties, age and infirmities forced me to retire from the series, but my cowboy star continued on in both theatrical features and then television. I was replaced in the series by my own son, who bore a close resemblance to me. I have been dead for many years, but I am still fondly remembered by western fans of that era. I prefer to think that, although I am dead, I'm not really gone. Oh, and one more thing. In my entire movie career, I never uttered a word of dialogue. Do you know me?
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Are you Ralph Meeker?
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I'll go with Baker, although I'm not familiar with Fay. John and Romy
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You are correct. finance. "Polly With A Past" was made around 1920. Clifton Webb made a few silent movies and was actually under contract to MGM for a short while in the early thirties, but he did not make any movies at that time. Most people thought that 1944's "Laura" was probably his screen debut, but it just marked the beginning of a career change for him. He was also credited with introducing Irving Berlin's song "Easter Parade" on Broadway. When Clifton Webb's mother died, he took it so hard that his friend Noel Coward is said to have remarked that it must be terrible to be orphaned at seventy. Your turn, finance.
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Thanks, Eve. Actress Ina Claire played the second female lead in "Ninotchka" opposite Greta Garbo. Some years earlier she had married John Gilbert after Garbo jilted him by literally leaving him at the altar. Ina Claire had starred in a movie in the silent days that featured an actor who many thought actually made his screen debut in a well known 1944 film. Not so! He was a Broadway actor and dancer who made a few silent movies. In the forties and fifties he became well known for playing impeccably dressed, fastidious types, not unlike his off screen self. He was often cast with children. He was inseparable from his mother, with whom he lived until her death at age 91. He became so distraught when she died that he only made one more film after that and died a few years later. Who is this character actor and what was the film in which he appeared with Ina Claire?
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Patrick Pam and David Alan
