Henry Fonda The

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1.101 documents for Henry Fonda The
  • Por lo que respecta a The Wrong Man, se trata de otra obra maestra de Alfred Hitchcock, donde [HENRY FONDA] es acusado de un crimen que no cometió y que se inspira en uno de los episodios más tétricos de la vida del director inglés: de pequeño su padre lo encerró una noche en una celda de la estación de policía local, después de desobedecerle. La experiencia le resultó traumática al futuro autor de Psycho.

  • Henry Fonda," a favorite classic hybrid tea rose, was created in 1995 when Jack Christensen crossed two unnamed seedlings. Named in honor of actor Henry Fonda, who generally portrayed a soft-spoken, "gentle but strong" personalities in his movies, this tough, hardy rose fills with handsome deep yellow blossoms time and again all season long.

  • When the United States went to war after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the film industry soon followed suit. Movies like "Flying Tigers" (1942), "Wake Island" (1942) and "Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo" (1944) rallied the nation to the Allied cause. Jimmy Stewart, Henry Fonda and Clark Gable personally joined the battle, while famed director Frank Capra oversaw "Why We Fight," a series of films meant to inspire the troops.

  • During the 1920s, Clarence Darrow made his name defending Reds, poor blacks, politicians, bootleggers and murderers. While Darrow was al- ready famous when he arrived in Dayton, Tenn., for the Scopes trial, "by the time he left, he was an American folk hero," writes John A. Farrell in "Clarence Darrow: Attorney for the Damned." And there Darrow would have remained, an uncomplicated figure, emblazoned in collective memory, a mix of Henry Fonda and Spencer Tracy, if not for this groundbreaking biography, the first to make use of new archival material that gives depth and dimension to this iconic figure.

  • LOS ANGELES - Every possible kind of United States president has been depicted on screen: corrupt ones and honorable ones, real ones and fictional ones. So with Presidents Day coming, it's as good a chance as any to say hail to the chief. Here's a look at five favorite movie presidents. Feel free to cast your own votes for the ones you like best: * Henry Fonda in "Fail-Safe" (1964): Not that it's surprising, but Fonda is everything you'd want in a president. He's decisive but even-tempered, commanding but kind, and he even shows a sense of humor. He is, in short, a good man. And when he has to make the most difficult choices imaginable in the face of nuclear annihilation, he's calm and gracious every step of the way. Sidney Lumet's stripped-down, gripping drama envisions a world on the ...

  • I didn't know anything but jazz and smoking grass," said director Mark Rydell of his early days studying acting with Sanford Meisner at the famed Neighborhood Playhouse. The New York-born Rydell learned fast once he got into the acting world. Many of the performers he directed were nominated or won Oscar and Golden Globe awards, including Marsha Mason (Cinderella Liberty), Sissy Spacek (The River), Bette Midler (The Rose), and Henry Fonda and Katherine Hepburn (On Golden Pond). Rydell -- who has garnered quite a few nominations himself along the way -- clearly chooses projects that appeal to him, which may explain the frequency of gaps between his pictures, from his cinematic debut, The Fox (1967), to 2006's Even Money. These films, like Rydell's charming period piece The Reivers and t...

  • In 1939, Henry Fonda starred in two John Ford classics - the Technicolor "Drums Along the Mohawk" and "Young Mr. Lincoln. Drums" got two Oscar nominations, and "Lincoln" received an original screenplay nod, but neither film won a statuette. And despite great performances, Fonda went unrecognized by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

  • His slogan is, "Once a champ always a champ." [Terry Claybon] will always greet you with "What's really going on. Terry is my man. He's worked so hard and is very good at what he does he deserves a champion caliber fighter and I think right now he has two of them," said [Steve Grant]. The two he's talking about are heavyweight prospect Damian "Bolo" Wills and undefeated cruiser weight talent Deon Elam who will be co-headlining Hollywood Fight Night IX at the Henry Fonda Theatre on Thursday Sept. 22.

  • Barbara Stanwyck stars as a tough broad (as always) who falls for the naive Henry Fonda, the sap she's trying to scam on a luxury cruise ship.

  • Entertainment Editors LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 26, 2004 Critically acclaimed Chicago director Ashley Bretz of BKPRL5 is directing a revol...



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