From a children's show (as the imaginary friend Frizbee):
https://scontent-lax3-1.xx….
From a children's show (as the imaginary friend Frizbee):
https://scontent-lax3-1.xx….
Fabian.
Went to college with Larry. We did Twelfth Night together. His best part was playing an old talent agent in a old Broadway classic, The Royal Family. He was a really nice guy, not one of the standouts in the department, but he was an old soul at an early age.
Catholic High School Girls in Trouble
There was a moment where Jackie walked towards the camera, and he moved, for a second, exactly like Moocher 37 years ago (Cutters!). A bit eerie.
Benny Goodman blows, but not in a bad way!
I had a grin on my face like opening a Christmas present you didn't know you really, really wanted. I hate to use the word "delightful" to describe a scene of such gore and high body count, but it was utterly… delightful.
Imaginary tip of the hat! Just the tip…
Disney didn't. The original Family Channel to Fox Family deal requires The 700 Club to be broadcast on the channel in perpetuity, so Disney is stuck with it. Disney apparently tried to buy out CBN's contract, but Pat Robertson turned them down.
What struck me is how old everybody looks in this, as if it were an artistic choice. It's clearly a story about a 47 year old woman torn between a fifty year old man and a fifty six year old man. Colin Firth looks like he stumbled in from The King's Speech 2.
It stars Timothy Dalton and young Jennifer Connelly, two people of whom I'm very fond for completely different reasons.
Ohhhh my! Career Opportunities. I feel guilty even thinking about it. Watching it - you hate yourself afterwards, but you just can't look away!
And a happy bunraku to you, too.
I expect Bernice to be back, because, dramaturgically, they laid a foundation for her by making the audience learn her name. Her name is spoken five times, which suggests that this name will matter later. You don't do that for a minor character of no significance. And her callback in the episode presages some future…
Ubisoft in the head to hold out too much hope for this movie.
It's an update of an eighteenth century comedia play, set in Brighton during the early sixties. There is a skiffle band that does numbers all through it, and there's even a finale with the whole cast, including Corden, singing. And you can get an original cast recording.
Strange. I'd always heard that Miss Johns uses her 1973 Tony as a left turn indicator.
Jane Seymour was also in the original Broadway cast as Constanze, and the night I saw it, she fell out of her dress.
Yes, yes and NO. Terence Stamp played Billy Budd in the 1962 film. Unless I am somehow misunderstanding your excitability.
Hey, that old guy isn't Billy Budd!