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Search resuls for: "Mary Hart"


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She'd experienced a lifetime full of glamourous international travel; she'd live another 42 years, thanks — she said — to a couple of secrets. She and my great-grandfather took their act all overThey billed themselves "Hap Hazard, the Careless Comedian, and Mary Hart, Who Cares Less," flying from theater to theater in a biplane. She'd deliver lectures illustrated by snapshots, headshots, and theater programs she'd amassed in trunks that accompanied her to European theaters and USO tours. Mary Hart lived to the age of 96. Courtesy of Melissa HartShe walked laps around the house and did bicep curlsI only had eyes for my great-grandmother.
Persons: , I've, She'd, Lydia Howery, Mary, Hap Hazard, Mary Hart, she'd, Melissa Hart, Mary didn't Organizations: Service, Business, Harvard University . Boy, USO
“With an undistinguished blond mustache, which may or may not be intended as a joke, Barth copes manic‐depressively with a shaky job situation and some hazy allegations about charges pending against him in Florida,” The New York Times wrote in a review in 1977 of the show’s opening week. “Barth will say only that his lawyer thinks he has ‘a pretty darn good case for entrapment.’”He was also known for his roles in “Clue” (1985) and the television shows “Roseanne” and “Arrested Development.” He also played the character Bob Bradley, an aide to the main character in the political sitcom “Veep.”More recently, Mr. Mull appeared in the Fox television series “The Cool Kids,” about a group of rule-breaking friends living in a retirement community. Martin E. Mull was born on Aug. 18, 1943, in Chicago to Harold and Betty Mull. He earned degrees from the Rhode Island School of Design. His work appeared in gallery shows and in the Whitney and Metropolitan museums.
Persons: Barth, “ Barth, Roseanne ”, Bob Bradley, , Mull, Martin E, Harold, Betty Mull Organizations: The New York Times, Fox, Rhode Island School of Design, Whitney, Metropolitan Locations: Florida, Chicago
The veteran character actor Dabney Coleman died Thursday at 92. Coleman began appearing in movies and TV series in the 1960s, when he was in his early 30s, and from the beginning, he had the look and the attitude of a grumpy middle-aged man. Much of Coleman’s best TV work — like the short-lived sitcoms “Buffalo Bill” and “The Slap Maxwell Story,” and the soap opera parody “Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman” — aren’t available to stream. And while he had roles in dozens of very good films and TV shows, he was often low in the billing. The seven Coleman performances below, though, are both outstanding and substantial, showcasing his imposing screen presence and ace comic timing.
Persons: Dabney Coleman, Coleman, , Bill ”, Maxwell, Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman ” Locations: Coleman’s
Meet the GOP's biggest Hollywood donors
  + stars: | 2020-08-26 | by ( Dave Levinthal | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +13 min
America First Action, the most notable super PAC backing President Donald Trump, has directly criticized Hollywood. Donors from Hollywood-area ZIP codes also rank among the most generous donors to key Republican senators, including Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Marco Rubio of Florida. 3 donor ZIP code in the nation, trailing only ZIP codes in Houston and Palm Beach, Florida, which is home to his Mar-a-Lago Club resort. Bill Pugliano/Getty ImagesTrump continues to profit from HollywoodIn messages to supporters this year, Trump has decried "liberal HOLLYWOOD donors" and "MEGA HOLLYWOOD DONORS," while his son Donald Trump Jr. has castigated the "Hollywood Elite." As president, Trump's pension earned him more than $84,000 in 2017, about $91,000 in 2018, and about $78,000 in 2019, his personal financial disclosures showed.
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