| Dare Danny: Haircut!Thu, 08 Jan 2009 01:36:06 -0800 by jumpnbounceThis would be the first of many responses to my video last year.http://www.yout ube.com/instantmashu ptold be to get a shave...which I did, but it has since grown backhttp://www.youtu be.com/BarryAldridge told me to get a haircut...I don't think I need to explain that onebasically, there is a video of me getting the above done, and can be found here:http://tinyurl. com/7uodlhalso, the video I reference of JohnnyDurham19's can be found here:http://tinyurl. com/95aa59 Related: dare danny jumpnbounce barry aldridge instantmashup haircut shave gathering vegetarian johnnydurham19 | |
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| The Arthur Haynes Show barber sketch 1961Thu, 08 Jan 2009 01:21:27 -0800 by 7779trevorThe Arthur Haynes Show barber sketch from 1961 in his comady show From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaEarly lifeArthur Haynes was the only child of a Fulham (south-west London) baker.[3] He started off in a number of odd jobs, doing painting, plumbing and joinery[3] till the Second World War broke out. He then became an entertainer while serving with the Royal Engineers during the war. He appeared with Charlie Chester in the concert party "Stars in Battledress". He continued to work with Chester after the war in the BBC Radio series Stand Easy (1946-49). On 21 February 1956, Haynes appeared in the first edition of ATV variety show series Strike a New Note.[3] After several appearances in this and subsequent variety series Get Happy (written by Dick Barry, Johnny Speight and John Antrobus), he was given his own show in 1957.[3] TelevisionHis ATV shows, networked on ITV, made Haynes the most popular comedian in Britain. There were 95 thirty minute shows, 62 thirty five minute shows and one fifty minute show spread over fifteen series. Haynes usually worked with Dermot Kelly who played another tramp who was not very smart. The shows were played out on a stage and basic scenery and props were used where for instance the audience could see outside and inside a house as there was no wall on their side. The shows would also feature guest stars to play music and sing like The Springfields in 1963 and Kenny Ball and his Jazzmen in 1964 and Joe Brown and the Bruvvers in 1965.Haynes received the Variety Club's award as ITV Personality of 1961 and appeared on the Royal Variety Performance in the same year.[3] The shows also made a minor star of Nicholas Parsons, who tended to play Haynes' straight/pompous neighbour/authority figure in the comedy sketches. RadioThe Arthur Haynes Show was also a success on BBC radio, recorded before live audiences. It ran through four series from 1962-1965.[3] He also recorded Arthur Again. Both series were scripted by Johnny Speight.[3] MoviesIn 1965 Haynes appeared in the Rock Hudson/Gina Lollobrigida movie Strange Bedfellows and in 1966, the British film Doctor in Clover.[3] However his potential film career was cut short by his sudden death. He died at the height of his career with his full potential unfulfilled.Censorsh ip on sex was very strong in those days but other things got through which would nowadays give a producer a heart attack if he read such things in a script. Johnny Speight, who later wrote the very controversial Till Death Us Do Part, wrote one such sketch for Dermot Kelly (Haynes was not involved). Kelly had rooms to let (as was common in those days) and a black man turned up and (as was common in those days too) Kelly turned him away because of his colour. Next, two Irishmen turned up and Kelly was very pleased to get two of his own countrymen, so let them have the room. Later he decides to see how they are getting on and goes up the (stage) stairs and peers through the keyhole at them (we see with the camera what he saw) and out of their suitcases the two men are taking bombs of the round black kind with fuses on top. Kelly is shocked that his own people would do this, people who, in this case, are obviously members of the Irish Republican Army. Related: arthur haynes show barber sketch 1961 johnny speight atv working class tramp till death us do part | |
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| To Catch A Thief - Original Trailer 1955Thu, 08 Jan 2009 01:11:51 -0800 by foxter65A jewel thief is at large on the Riviera, and all evidence points to retired cat burglar Cary Grant. Escaping the law, Grant heads to the Cote D'Azur, where he is greeted with hostility by his old partners in crime. All of them had been pardoned due to their courageous activities in the wartime Resistance, and all are in danger of arrest thanks to this new crime wave. But Grant pleads innocence, and vows to find out who's been copying his distinctive style. With the reluctant aid of detective John Williams, Grant launches his investigation by keeping tabs on the wealthiest vacationers on the Riviera. One such person is heavily bejeweled Jessie Royce Landis, who is as brash and outspoken as her daughter Grace Kelly is quiet and demure. But "still waters run deep," as they say, and soon Kelly is amorously pursuing the far-from-resistant Grant. Part of Kelly's attraction to Grant is the possibility that he is the thief; the prospect of danger really turns this gal on. Being Cary Grant, of course, he can't possibly be guilty, which is proven in due time. But by film's end, it's obvious that Kelly has fallen hard for Grant, crook or no crook. Occasionally written off as a lesser Alfred Hitchcock film (did we really need that third-act fashion show?), To Catch a Thief is actually as enjoyable and engaging now as it was 40 years ago. Though the Riviera location photography is pleasing, our favorite scene takes place in a Paramount Studios mockup of a luxury hotel suite, where Grant and Kelly make love while a fireworks display orgasmically erupts outside their window. And who could forget the scene where Jessie Royce Landis disdainfully stubs out a cigarette in an expensive plate of eggs? Adapted by frequent Hitchcock collaborator John Michael Hayes from a novel by David Dodge To Catch a Thief won an Academy Award for cinematographer Robert Burks.Cary Grant - John Robie (The Cat)Grace Kelly - Frances StevensJesse Royce Landis - Mrs. Jessie StevensJohn Williams - H.H. HughsonCharles Vanel - BertaniBrigitte Auber - Danielle FoussardJean Martinelli - FoussardGeorgette Anys - GermaineGeorge Adrian John Alderson - DetectiveMartha Bamattre René Blancard - Inspector LepicEugene Borden - French WaiterNina Borget - FrenchwomanMargaret Brewster - Cold Cream WomanLewis Charles - Man with milk in kitchenFrank Chelland - ChefWee Willie Davis - Big man in kitchenDominique Davray - AntoinetteGuy de Vestel - DetectiveRussell Gaige - Mr. SanfordSteven Geray - Desk clerkMichael Hadlow - Monaco PolicemanJean Hebey - MercierGladys Holland - Elegant French womanBela Kovacs - DetectiveJeanne Lafayette Eddie LeBaron Roland Le Saffre - ClaudeDon Megowan - DetectiveLouis Mercier - CroupierAlberto Morin - DetectiveGeorge Nardelli Paul Newlan - Vegetable Man in KitchenBarry Norton - FrenchmanGeorge Paris Manuel Paris Leonard Penn - Monaco PolicemanAlbert Pollet Loulette Sablon Adele St. Maur - Woman with Bird Cage on BusCosmo Sardo Otto F. Schulzs - ChefMarie Stoddard - Mrs. StanfordPhilip Van Zandt - Jewelry Clerk Related: to catch a thief - original trailer 1955 | |
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| The Fugitive A.P.B. (Part 3 of 5)Wed, 07 Jan 2009 23:49:22 -0800 by FilmsRreel(PART 3 of 5) "The Fugitive (1963)" episode #58 of 120 in original ABC TV NETWORK AIRED ORDER titled "A.P.B." #58 Season: 2 Episode: 28 First Aired: 4/6/1965 Prod Code: 4678 STORY:Kimble hops onto a freight train and finds himself in the company of three escaped convicts (two of whom are wounded during their escape). One of the convicts dies from his wounds while the second one, a brutal murderer named Neil Pinkerton, forces Kimble to treat his leg wound. Pinkerton decides to keep Kimble as a hostage as a safeguard against the police. Pinkerton, Kimble, and the other prisoner, named Matt Mooney, seek refuge in a farmhouse owned by widow Mona Ross and her mother, who recognize all of them and treat Kimble, Mooney and Pinkerton as their celebrity guests. CAST AND CREW:Writer: Dan UllmanDirector: William D. GordonStars: David Janssen (Dr. Richard Kimble)Barry Morse (Lt. Philip Gerard)William Conrad (Narrator)Guest Stars: James Nusser (Smiley)Hugh Sanders (I) (Sheriff)Claudia Bryar (Housekeeper)Virgini a Gregg (Mrs. Ross)Fred Beir (Lt. Peterson)Shirley Knight (Mona)Lou Antonio (Matt Mooney)Paul Richards (I) (Neil Pinkerton)Hal Riddle (Dispatcher) NOTES:Location: Topeka, KansasKimble's Alias: Ed Morris. The ending is a bit disturbing. QUOTES:Opening Narration: One community appears much like any other to a man who travels a lot. To Richard Kimble, fugitive, some are friendlier than others, some are more colorful. But they all have one thing in common: danger. »Closing Narration: As a doctor, Richard Kimble was sworn to the preservation of human life. Now, years later, as he travels the lonely path from city to city and state to state, the life he is searching to save is his own. ++++BIG THANKS TO CBS/PARAMOUNT FOR FINALLY RELEASING "THE FUGITIVE" SEASON ONE ONTO DVD! PICK UP SEASON ONE TODAY AT A STORE NEAR YOU OR ONLINE! ++++ ****CLICK THE LINK BELOW TO VIEW MORE OF THIS EPISODE Related: the fugitive a.p.b. apb david janssen shirley knight lou antonio paul richards second season two episode | |
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