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#Rosemary DeCamp
thatgirltvshow · 5 days
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That Girl (1966-1971) 3.12 Decision Before Dawn
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citizenscreen · 10 months
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Rosemary DeCamp, William Powell, and Mary Clark test the sound effects of a model electric train in preparation for CBS Radio’s Silver Theater performance of “Parent by Proxy” in 1940.
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old-movies-stuff · 2 months
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13 ghosts - 1960
Part 11
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screamscenepodcast · 8 months
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Your hosts peek through "Illusion-O" glasses to review 13 GHOSTS (1960) from William Castle! This spoopy children's horror stars Donald Woods, Charles Herbert and Martin Milner.
Plus, what's this? A new co-host joins the show..?
Context setting 00:00; Synopsis 13:28; Discussion 27:33; Ranking 38:28
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ozu-teapot · 2 years
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Saturday the 14th | Howard R. Cohen | 1981  
Kari Michaelsen, Paula Prentiss, Allen Joseph, Thomas Newman, Rosemary DeCamp, Roberta Collins
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machetelanding · 2 years
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13 Ghosts (dir. William Castle; 1960)
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weirdlookindog · 2 years
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13 Ghosts (1960)
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cinematicfinatic · 2 years
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Yankee Doodle Dandy
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gatutor · 2 years
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John Garfield-Rory Mallinson-Rosemary DeCamp "El orgullo de los marines" (Pride of the marines) 1945, de Delmer Daves.
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onefootin1941 · 2 years
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Vintage TV: The Bob Cummings Show, on CBS, 1955-1959.
From left:
Ann B. Davis as Charmaine "Shultzy" Schulz
Bob Cummings as Bob Collins
Dwayne Hickman as Chuck MacDonald
Rosemary DeCamp as Margaret MacDonald
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Nora Prentiss
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With the tagline “Loving her once is once too often,” Warner Bros. successfully marketed Vincent Sherman’s NORA PRENTISS (1947, TCM, YouTube) as a doomed romance, with the implication that Ann Sheridan’s title character was the type of woman who destroyed men. I’m sure Sheridan could have played that kind of woman, but here she’s just about the nicest femme fatale ever caught in the murky depths of film noir. The doom here is all at the hands of leading man Kent Smith, who carries a middle-aged fling to almost absurd levels.
The film starts well with staid middle-class doctor Smith rebelling against his regimented life by driving through the park so he arrives at the office late. Staying late to make up for it puts him on the spot when nightclub singer Sheridan is almost hit by a car. He treats her, falls in love, and before long he’s missing social engagements with his wife (Rosemary de Camp, who handles her constricted role quite well) to squire Sheridan around. But though she lets Smith buy her expensive gifts, Sheridan is no gold digger. She dreams of having a family of her own and insists they break it off when the strain of carrying on in secret starts affecting Smith’s practice. And then the film takes a left turn into whackadoodle melodrama with Smith faking his death so he can run off with Sheridan, even if that means she’ll have to support him, and they can never marry. From there, it just gets stranger, and the ending is rather hard to swallow.
Had the picture been directed by a more eccentric or visionary director, it might have been high camp. Douglas Sirk would later do wonders with material similar to this film’s first act in THERE’S NO TOMORROW (1956), and you can imagine how much fun he would have had with the high-pitched melodrama of NORA PRENTISS’ resolution. Sherman, however, is a respectable craftsman without a whole lot of style or personality. He and cinematographer James Wong Howe construct some strong, shadowy compositions, and Franz Waxman, here one of the few composers Warner Bros. let write his own fanfare in place of their standard Max Steiner one, supplies a lot of psychology with his background music. Sheridan is quite good, as ever, and has two aptly chosen songs — one flirtatious, the other mournful — that she acts beautifully. But the overall effect is still too normal to support the film’s preposterous plot.
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thatgirltvshow · 24 days
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That Girl (1966-1971) 3.25 Bad Day At Marvin Gardens
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citizenscreen · 3 months
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Ann Blyth and Rosemary DeCamp for Charles Lamont’s THE MERRY MONAHANS (1944)
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old-movies-stuff · 2 months
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13 ghosts - 1960
Part 8
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lajoiedefrancoise · 28 days
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By The Light Of The Silvery Moon (1953)
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raynbowclown · 2 months
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Yankee Doodle Dandy
Yankee Doodle Dandy – the classic musical biography of George M. Cohan, starring James Cagney, Joan Leslie, Richard Whorf Continue reading Yankee Doodle Dandy
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