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Search resuls for: "Mara Wilson"


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Read previewOne of the child stars of "Mrs. Doubtfire" revealed that Robin Williams went to bat for her after she was expelled for taking time off to star in the blockbuster comedy film. "Mrs. Doubtfire" starred Williams as a divorced dad who hatches an elaborate plan to imitate a female housekeeper so he can work for his estranged wife and see his children. "I got thrown out of high school on 'Doubtfire,'" Jakub told her costars. I was attending high school in Canada, then I left for four months to go film the movie." Speaking to Business Insider last year on the 30th anniversary of the movie, "Mrs Doubtfire" director Chris Columbus said that he and Williams began discussing the possibility of a sequel in 2014.
Persons: , Doubtfire, Robin Williams, Williams, Lisa Jakub, Sally Field's, Mara Wilson, Matthew Lawrence, Jakub, Robin, Sally Field, Lawrence, hadn't, Chris Columbus Organizations: Service, Business, Fox, University of Southern, LA Locations: Canada, University of Southern California, Columbus
CNN —Danny DeVito and Arnold Schwarzenegger have plans to team up once again for a new movie. We met way before ‘Twins,’ years ago,” DeVito told CNN in a recent interview. We get along really well.”As for their Oscars reunion, DeVito said they tried to keep it quiet before the event. “We didn’t tell anybody and that was fun going out there and it was a big, good reception. You take the music out of the movie and the symphony orchestra is in front of the screen.”“I narrate the movie as well as play Wormwood,” DeVito explained.
Persons: Danny DeVito, Arnold Schwarzenegger, , “ Batman, “ Arnold, ” DeVito, , DeVito, “ We’re, He’ll, “ Matilda ”, “ David Newman, Matilda ’, Pearlman, Mrs, Wormwood, Mara Wilson, Matilda Organizations: CNN, ‘ Twins, State Theater Locations: Philadelphia ”, New Brunswick, N.J,
With Donald Trump facing charges in three different criminal cases, the biggest questions in American politics are whether that creates an opening for his Republican rivals in the presidential race — and whether it disqualifies him in the eyes of general election voters. A new set of Times polls has answers to those questions. It shows the president and the former president still tied among registered voters, each at 43 percent. Nate Cohn, The New York Times’s chief political analyst, talks us through the first Times/Siena polling of the 2024 election cycle.
Persons: Donald Trump, Nate Cohn Organizations: Republican, The, Times Locations: Siena
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