Christopher Walken

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841 documents for Christopher Walken
  • The lifeguard captain who helped pull Natalie Wood's body from the water 30 years ago said he still believes the actress could have been saved had officials begun the search for her earlier. Roger Smith, the former county supervising rescue boat captain, told the Los Angeles Times he hoped the Los Angeles County sheriff's reopening of her death investigation would answer lingering questions over why lifeguards were not alerted more quickly when Wood disappeared from a yacht off Santa Catalina Island on Thanksgiving weekend 1981 during an excursion with her husband, Robert Wagner, and actor Christopher Walken.

  • They are the kings of savvy lyrics, the guys who came up with gems like "I saw you talkin' to Christopher Walken/on my TV screen" ("Hackensack") or "I wonder if he ever has cried/because his kitten got run over and died" ("Leave the Biker"). But Fountains of Wayne's attention to lyrics isn't rooted in contemporary music, according to singer and guitarist Chris Collingwood.

  • Josh White Jr.'s first public appearance came in 1944, when he was 4 years old, singing with his father, bluesman Josh White Sr., at the famed Cafe Society in New York. In the ensuing decades, the younger White attended the Professional Children's School with classmates Elliott Gould, Sandra Dee, Leslie Uggams and Christopher Walken, acted in five Broadway plays from 1949 to 1962, and appeared in more than 50 television shows.

  • Willy Wonka!" "Christopher Walken!" "The Tick! "Improv troupes are so successful [in Boise) because they have such a community feel about them. Internally they share the spotlight, promotion, marketing, advertising, what's best for the company as a whole, and also externally, as they can perform at different venues, events and are really good at putting their group out there," says [Jen Adams]. "From the audience perspective, you get to participate in the show, it's fun and inexpensive entertainment." "You're definitely going to see something that's off-the-wall," says CJ, Sower of Insert Foot. "Something you'll never see again."

  • Pero esta nueva versión, clasificada PG-13, con Nicole Kidman, Matthew Broderick, Glenn Close, Christopher Walken y Bette Midler, dirigidos por Frank Oz, con un reconcebido guión de Paul Rudnick, no es una película de horror ni pretende serlo, es una comedia que en lugar de tratar de ponernos los pelos de punta intenta hacernos reír. En estado de depresión y prácticamente catatónica, [Joanna Eberhart], para recuperarse, se muda, con su marido Walter Kresby (Matthew Broderick) y sus dos hijos, de Manhattan a Stepford, donde la familia es recibida con los brazos abiertos por la imposiblemente entusiasta lideresa social del lugar, Claire Wellington (Glenn Close) y su marido, Mike Wellington (Christopher Walken). Que Joanna no haya adoptado el apellido de su marido es pertinente a la trama...

  • They shouldn't. Christopher Walken, having gotten the popculture eguivalent of tenure, has clearly stopped giving a shit. Seeing Christopher Walken starring as Christopher Walken in a funny costume got old a while ago. And although his costumes are admittedly pretty funny ("Do you still dress like you shop at Elton John's garage sale?" asks the blind [Wong]), it's hardly enough to carry a movie.

  • The cowbell has taken on a life of its own in American culture, from Hilda Chester ringing it to cheer on the Brooklyn Dodgers to Christopher Walken's "More Cowbell" skit on Saturday Night Live. It is, though, just a bell, supposed to be used to hang around a cow's neck.

  • The cowbell has taken on a life of its own in American culture, from Hilda Chester ringing it to cheer on the Brooklyn Dodgers to Christopher Walken's "More Cowbell" skit on Saturday Night Live. It is, though, just a bell, supposed to be used to hang around a cow's neck.

  • With its darkly atmospheric guitar work and evocative lyrics, the music of '70s chart mainstays Blue yster Cult, which headlines tonight's opening of the Delta Fair & Music Festival, has always had a cinematic quality. And over the years, the band has contributed songs to a number of soundtracks, most memorably the 1981 animated science-fiction cult classic "Heavy Metal," as well as video games such as Ripper and Guitar Hero. But in recent years, Blue yster Cult has been most closely associated not with dark edgy epics but with a television comedy skit. In 2000, "Saturday Night Live" aired a skit, purporting to be 1976 documentary footage in an episode of VH-1's "Behind the Music," in which a producer played by actor Christopher Walken implores fictional band member Gene (Will Ferrell) ...

  • Listeners to Q97.9's morning show on Thursday heard the radio hosts interview a group of A-list celebrities, including Tracy Morgan, Christopher Walken and Adam Sandler. Fans flocked to The Q Morning Show's Facebook page to comment on the celebrity guests, saying things such as "I'm busting a gut!" and "too funny!



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