Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. World Without End: Directed by Edward Bernds. With Hugh Marlowe, Nancy Gates, Nelson Leigh, Rod Taylor. Astronauts returning from a voyage to Mars are caught in a time warp and are propelled into a post-Apocalyptic Earth populated by mutants.

  2. Another World: Created by Irna Phillips, William J. Bell. With Victoria Wyndham, Constance Ford, Hugh Marlowe, Linda Dano. The life in the Midwestern town of Bay City, and the love, loss, trials, and triumph of its residents, who come from different backgrounds and social circles.

  3. 17 de ago. de 2023 · While attending a school for diplomats' daughters, the teen-aged daughter of the American ambassador uses her access to various embassies to engage in espion...

  4. Born the comically alliterative Hugh Herbert Hipple in Philadelphia, the actor changed his name to the weightier Hugh Marlowe after beginning his stage career at Los Angeles' Pasadena Playhouse. After a brief stint in radio during the 1930s, Marlowe earned his first supporting roles as a contract player for 20th Century Fox.

  5. 13 de feb. de 2018 · Hugh Marlowe Short Bio. Hugh Marlowe was born in Pennsylvania in 1911. Marlowe had a radio, stage, and film career. I will confine myself to just the films at this point. Marlow began his stage career in the early 1930s at the Pasadena Playhouse in California. He first appeared on the New York stage in a 1936 production of ”Arrest That Woman.”.

  6. The Stand at Apache River: Directed by Lee Sholem. With Stephen McNally, Julie Adams, Hugh Marlowe, Jaclynne Greene. At Apache River Station, the passengers of a stagecoach, the owners of the station, a sheriff and his prisoner and a few ferry passengers are besieged by a band of renegade Apaches.

  7. Hugh Marlowe. Marlowe was born Hugh Hipple in Philadelphia, and began his stage career in the 1930s at the Pasadena Playhouse in California. He performed extensively on radio, stage, television and film with credits including off-Broadway productions of "The Deer Park" in 1967 and "All My Sons" in 1974.