- Deborah Kerr
Deborah Kerr, CBE (born 30 September 1921) is a Golden Globe award winning Scottish actress who is best known today for starring in the films "The King and I", "An Affair to Remember" and "From Here to Eternity". Nominated six times for an Academy Award as Best Actress, she never won, but was a recipient of an Academy Honorary Award for a motion picture career that has always represented "Perfection, Discipline and Elegance". - Fred Zinnemann
Fred Zinnemann (April 29, 1907-March 14, 1997) was an Austrian-American film director. He won four Academy Awards and directed classic movies like "From Here to Eternity", "High Noon" and "A Man for All Seasons". - Daniel Taradash
Daniel Taradash, (29 January 1913 - 22 February 2003) was an Academy Award-winning American screenwriter. Taradash was born in Louisville, Kentucky, the only child son of a clothing manufacturer. He finished high school at age 16 in Miami and attended Harvard College and Harvard Law School. He moved to New York, won a playwriting contest, and earned the chance to take a course with Theresa Helburn, the head of the Theatre Guild. - Philip Ober
Philip Ober (23 March 1902 in Fort Payne, Alabama - 13 September 1982, Mexico City) was an American actor. Ober often appeared in roles as a straight man in farcical circumstances. From 1954 to 1967 he frequently appeared in television series. He was married to actress Vivian Vance, who portrayed Ethel Mertz in the series " I Love Lucy". - Harry Bellaver
Harry Bellaver (February 12, 1905 to August 8, 1993) was a stage, film and television actor who appeared in many roles from the 1930s through the 1980s. Bellaver was born in Hillsboro, Illinois, the son of Italian immigrants working in the Hillsboro coal mines. He appeared in numerous Broadway plays over the years, with his Broadway debut in the 1931 Group Theatre production of the play "1931". He also appeared in the Elmer Rice play "We, The People" in 1933, … - Burnett Guffey
Burnett Guffey (May 26, 1905 - May 30, 1983 in Del Rio, Tennessee) was an American cinematographer. The Academy Award-winning lensman began as an assistant cameraman in the early 1920 while still a teenager. Guffey was hired as a Director of Photography for Columbia Pictures in 1944. He won Academy Awards for "From Here to Eternity" (1953) and "Bonnie and Clyde" (1967) while working for Warner Brothers. - Carolyn Jones
Carolyn Jones was an American actress, she is best remembered for playing the role of Morticia Addams in the classic TV Series "The Addams Family". Carolyn Sue Jones was born in Amarillo, Texas, she was named after actress Carole Lombard, and after moving to California, joined the Pasadena Playhouse in 1947, learning her craft and acting under the stage name Carolyn Jones. She secured a contract with Paramount Studios and made her first film in 1952. - Willis Bouchey
Willis Bouchey was an American character actor who appeared in almost 150 films and television shows. He is perhaps best known for his appearances in "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance", "The Big Heat", "No Name on the Bullet", and "Suddenly". He also made uncredited appearances in "From Here to Eternity", "How the West Was Won", "Them!", and "A Star is Born". - Jerry Wald
Jerry Wald, born Jerome Irving Wald (16 September 1911 - 13 July 1962), was a producer and screenwriter for motion pictures and radio shows. Born in Brooklyn, New York, his brother and sons have all been active in the business. Wald produced and wrote many films between the 1940s and 1960s including "Sons and Lovers, The Sound and the Fury, In Love and War, Peyton Place, An Affair to Remember, Two Tickets to Broadway, The Glass Menagerie, … - Robert J. Wilke
Robert J. Wilke (born 18 May 1914 in Cincinnati, Ohio; died 28 March 1989 in Los Angeles) was a prolific American film actor noted primarily for his villainous roles, mainly in westerns. Wilke started as a stuntman in the 1930s and his first appearance on screen was in "San Francisco" (1936). He soon began to acquire regular character parts, mainly as a heavy, and made his mark when, along with Lee Van Cleef and Sheb Wooley, … - Dave Irwin
- Anna
We're two young American musicians teaching English and working with Youth Harvest Church in Kobe, Japan. - Christopher Hagan
Love all that is musical. - Elizabeth Tapley
hmmm. Remembering the 60's and my boyfriend's moped....calling me on the phone to play my favorite song...old telephones that were heavy and dialed...black and white pictures with big toothy smiles...dinky my cat that I dressed in a dress...the dogwood tree where we all met...momma making brownies for the whole gang...biscuits and gravy...and sitting on the swing...going on a trip to Big Rock, Tennessee...it's all a part of me. - Dominique
Mon site officiel :. - Darrin Ebbert
- Hobbi
- Manny Klein
Manny Klein (born as Emmanuel Klein on February 4, 1908; died May 31, 1994) was a jazz trumpeter most associated with swing. He began with Paul Whiteman in 1928 and would be active throughout the 1930s playing with several major bands of the era. This includes the Dorseys and Benny Goodman. In 1937 he moved to California and worked with Frank Trumbauer's orchestra. He also did soundtracks and played trumpet for the film From Here to Eternity, but was uncredited. - Maurice Adler
E. Maurice "Buddy" Adler was an American film producer and a former production head for 20th Century Fox studios. Born in New York City, New York, in 1940, he married actress Anita Louise Fremault (1915-1970) with whom he had two children. In 1954, his production of "From Here to Eternity" won the Academy Award for Best Picture and in 1956, his "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing" was nominated for best picture. - Deirdre Lenihan
Deirdre Lenihan (born May 19, 1946 in New York, New York, USA) is an American actress. She first appeared in the 1972 film "Glass Houses". She has also appeared in numerous television series, such as "From Here to Eternity" and "The Waltons". She is married to the actor James Sloyan with whom she has two children: Samantha Sloyan, who is also an actress, and Daniel Sloyan. - Cathy Mendonca
I like to dress up pretty. - Manny Klein
- Julia Sabre
- Sally Kim
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