The Legend of Lizzie Borden - ABC - February 10, 1975
Historical Drama
Running Time: 96 minutes
Stars:
Elizabeth Montgomery as Lizzie Borden
Fionnula Flanagan as Bridget Sullivan
Ed Flanders as Hosea M. Knowlton
Katherine Helmond as Emma Borden
Don Porter as George D. Robinson
Fritz Weaver as Andrew Borden
Bonnie Bartlett as Sylvia Knowlton
John Beal as Dr. Bowen
Helen Craig as Abby Borden
Alan Hewitt as Mayor Coughlin
Gail Kobe as Alice Russell
Hayden Rorke as Julien Ralph
Amzie Strickland as Adelaide Churchill
Robert Symonds as Andrew Jennings
Elizabeth Montgomery and Lizzie Borden were sixth cousins once removed, both descending from 17th-century Massachusetts resident, John Luther. Rhonda McClure, the genealogist who documented the Montgomery-Borden Connection, said, "I wonder How Elizabeth would have felt if she knew she was playing her own cousin." (Wikipedia)
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She-Wolf of London (1946) - Pressbook
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US Vogue July 1974
Two-piece set in burgundy and beige wool by Geoffrey Beene. The easy little sweater that hits the hip. In Agnona fabric. Hat by Don Anderson for Scheer Bros. Earrings and bracelets, Catherine Stein. Clutch, Falchi-Sebiri, tights, Belle-Sharmaer, shoes, Bruno Magli.
Makeup, Way bandy, hairstyle, Suga.
Ensemble deux pièces en laine bordeaux et beige de Geoffrey Beene. Le petit pull facile qui touche la hanche. En tissu Agnona. Chapeau de Don Anderson pour Scheer Bros. Boucles d'oreilles et bracelets, Catherine Stein. Clutch, Falchi-Sebiri, collants, Belle-Sharmeer, chaussures, Bruno Magli.
Maquillage, Way bandy, coiffure, Suga.
Photo Arthur Elgort
vogue archive
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Sam Winston: ‘A Delicate Sight’, Texts by Raymond Antrobus, Bernardine Evaristo, Don Paterson, and Max Porter, Designed by A Practice for Everyday Life, London, 2021
Plus: a twenty-minute film about darkness, creativity and life beyond the screen. Featuring Raymond Antrobus, Bernardine Evaristo, Don Paterson, Max Porter and Sam Winston
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GH: JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #215
JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA had been one of my favorite comic books when I was younger. It was one of only three series to which I ever maintained a subscription to insure that I didn’t miss an issue. But by 1982, the book was feeling tired and a bit stale. Writer Gerry Conway had been in place for more than sixty issues, and one got the feeling that his heart wasn’t in the assignment to the same…
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Does anyone ever think about all the things that Luz did just being herself that made everyone’s lives better?
Like, she alludes to how much better everyone’s lives would be without her, but-
If she hadn’t been there, Willow probably never would’ve joined the plant track and would’ve been stuck with a magic that wasn’t for her for the rest of her life.
If she hadn’t been there, Ed and Em probably would’ve posted Amity’s diary all over school and literally ruined her life.
If she hadn’t been there, the bat queen wouldn’t have changed her minds about the pailsmen and a lot of the Hexide kids wouldn’t have them.
If she hadn’t been there all of the Hexide kids never would’ve thought twice about joining covens and getting coven sigils. They would’ve died during the day of unity.
If she hadn’t been there, the basilisk probably wouldn’t have been stopped until quite a few people were dead, and the multi-track students wouldn’t be a thing.
If she hadn’t been there, so many people would be on different paths of life or dead all together, never reaching their full potential.
It literally sucks so much that she genuinely thinks that people would be better off without her when even on the small scale, the opposite is true.
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Don Porter and Sally Field from the TV show “Gidget” (1965)
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Bela Lugosi, Leif Erickson, Nils Asther, Lionel Atwill, Ralph Morgan, Francis Pierlot, Don Porter, and Frank Reicher in Night Monster (1942)
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My Friend Irma Goes West
In the sequel to "My Friend Irma," titled "My Friend Irma Goes West," Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, alongside John Lund, Maire Wilson, and Diana Lynn, embark on a new comedic journey directed by Hal Walker in 1950.
Up next on my Dean Martin/Jerry Lewis marathon is the sequel to 1949’s “My Friend Irma,” the 1950 film “My Friend Irma Goes West,” directed by Hal Walker and released the same years as their third movie “At War with the Army”. While we see a change of director, the main cast remains the same. Returning with Martin and Lewis are John Lund, Marie Wilson, and Diana Lynn. I must say, this is one of…
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Sam Winston: 'A Delicate Sight', Workshop, Tate Britain, London, October 13, 2023
The Project: A Delicate Sight
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Bad movie I have Lon Chaney Jr. The Wolf Man: The Legacy Collection It has The Wolf Man 1941 , Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man 1943 , The She Wolf of London 1946 and Werewolf of London 1935
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Elvis Presley and Don Porter in Live a little love a little (1968)
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