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  1. According to Mrs. Hoyle. Page 1 of 6, 11 total items. Gangsters buy the shabby hotel where a retired schoolteacher (Spring Byington) has lived for 25 years.

  2. According to Mrs. Hoyle. A sweet old lady makes it tough on hoods who buy the hotel where she lives. Spring Byington, Anthony Caruso. Slattery: Brett King. Angela: Tanis Chandler. Rogan: Robert ...

  3. His steadfast rejection of Darwinism and the opinion that human life originated in space didn’t encourage his colleagues to flock to his side. Although Fred Hoyle might be a plausible initial guess when tracing the origin of this phrase, the Hoyle in question here is Edmond Hoyle (1672-1769), the English barrister and writer who was the ...

  4. 21 de jul. de 2017 · It is like a professed whist-player, disposing of every card according to Mr. Hoyle, whilst an ignorant gamester, unacquainted with that gentleman’s maxims, plays in so extraordinary a manner, and so very different from the established rules, that all his antagonist’s plan is entirely destroyed, as he is defending a game which the other has really no idea of.

  5. I stubbled upon the start of what I thought was a short film on TCM this morning, but According To Mrs. Hoyle (1951) at an hour long, is a story about a retired school teacher living at a hotel than is now run by a mobster gone "legit". Things don't stay 'hunky dory" for long. Also, don't read the Letterboxd synopsis for the film.

  6. I stubbled upon the start of what I thought was a short film on TCM this morning, but According To Mrs. Hoyle (1951) at an hour long, is a story about a retired school teacher living at a hotel than is now run by a mobster gone "legit". Things don't stay 'hunky dory" for long. Also, don't read the Letterboxd synopsis for the film.

  7. According to Mrs. Hoyle is a 1951 American crime film directed by Jean Yarbrough and written by Scott Darling and Barney Gerard. The film stars Spring Byington, Anthony Caruso, Tanis Chandler, Brett King, Stephen Chase and Robert Karnes. The film was released on May 20, 1951, by Monogram Pictures.