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1962-63 Year Book Canadian Motion Picture Industry
FROM THE OF THE CREATIVE the industry’s most distinguished array of moviemaking talents will make this Columbia’s brilliant year of achievement. COLUMBIA PICTURES C0RP0RATI0 The world’s most popular fountain drinks! ORANGE People get thirsty just looking at it! The New Queen Dispenser is illuminated and animated to attract customers and earn profits—it does ! and Easse ROOT BEER This self-contained Hires Barrel will increase sales by 300% or more . and it’s all plus business! PRODUCTS OF CRUSH INTERNATIONAL LIMITED MONTREAL • TORONTO • WINNIPEG • VANCOUVER 1962-63 YEAR BOOK CANADIAN MOTION PICTURE INDUSTRY WITH TELEVISION SECTION PRICE $3.00 FILM PUBLICATIONS of Canada, Ltd. 175 BLOOR ST. EAST TORONTO 5. ONT. CANADA Editor: HYE BOSSIN Assistants: Miss E. Silver and Ben Halter this is where the show goes on The sound and projection equipment in your booth is the heart of your theatre. If this equipment fails, your show stops. The only protection against this is top quality equipment, regularly serviced. That's why it pays to talk to the people at General Sound. They have the most complete line of High Fidelity and Stereo sound and projection equipment in Canada. You have a whole range of fine names to choose from, backed up by first rate service facilities from coast- to-coast. Call General Sound, the heart of good picture projection, tomorrow. General Sound m, GENERAL SOUND AND THEATRE EQUIPMENT LTD. S 861 BAY STREET, TORONTO Offices in Voncouver, Winnipeg, Calgary, Montreal, Halifax, Saint John Index of Sections Pioneer of the Year Award 16 Exhibition ..... ----- 19 Theatre Director 37 Distribution ________ 63 Production . -
Boxoffice Barometer (March 6, 1961)
MARCH 6, 1961 IN TWO SECTIONS SECTION TWO Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer presents William Wyler’s production of “BEN-HUR” starring CHARLTON HESTON • JACK HAWKINS • Haya Harareet • Stephen Boyd • Hugh Griffith • Martha Scott • with Cathy O’Donnell • Sam Jaffe • Screen Play by Karl Tunberg • Music by Miklos Rozsa • Produced by Sam Zimbalist. M-G-M . EVEN GREATER IN Continuing its success story with current and coming attractions like these! ...and this is only the beginning! "GO NAKED IN THE WORLD” c ( 'KSX'i "THE Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer presents GINA LOLLOBRIGIDA • ANTHONY FRANCIOSA • ERNEST BORGNINE in An Areola Production “GO SPINSTER” • • — Metrocolor) NAKED IN THE WORLD” with Luana Patten Will Kuluva Philip Ober ( CinemaScope John Kellogg • Nancy R. Pollock • Tracey Roberts • Screen Play by Ranald Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer pre- MacDougall • Based on the Book by Tom T. Chamales • Directed by sents SHIRLEY MacLAINE Ranald MacDougall • Produced by Aaron Rosenberg. LAURENCE HARVEY JACK HAWKINS in A Julian Blaustein Production “SPINSTER" with Nobu McCarthy • Screen Play by Ben Maddow • Based on the Novel by Sylvia Ashton- Warner • Directed by Charles Walters. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer presents David O. Selznick's Production of Margaret Mitchell’s Story of the Old South "GONE WITH THE WIND” starring CLARK GABLE • VIVIEN LEIGH • LESLIE HOWARD • OLIVIA deHAVILLAND • A Selznick International Picture • Screen Play by Sidney Howard • Music by Max Steiner Directed by Victor Fleming Technicolor ’) "GORGO ( Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer presents “GORGO” star- ring Bill Travers • William Sylvester • Vincent "THE SECRET PARTNER” Winter • Bruce Seton • Joseph O'Conor • Martin Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer presents STEWART GRANGER Benson • Barry Keegan • Dervis Ward • Christopher HAYA HARAREET in “THE SECRET PARTNER” with Rhodes • Screen Play by John Loring and Daniel Bernard Lee • Screen Play by David Pursall and Jack Seddon Hyatt • Directed by Eugene Lourie • Executive Directed by Basil Dearden • Produced by Michael Relph. -
Eight Crewmen Still Missing in Atlantic
Weatlier MIDDLFrOWN; Fair today, tonight and to- BED BANK morrow. High both days In the BAYSHORE EDITION 20s. Increasing cloudiness to- * * * morrow. Low tonight, 0. See MONDAY THROUGH rRWAY-lST JOT tides and weather page 2. Distribution Today 16,650 Issued dally. Monday through Friday, enured >• Second Clan Matter it the Po* MIDDLETOWN, N. J., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1960 7c PER COPY 35c PER WEEK /OL. 83, NO. 124 Olllce at Ulddletown. New Jtrjoy. under additional entry permit dated Aug. 20. 1857. BY CARRIER PAGE ONE Snowstorm Cost Parkway $100,000 Eight Crewmen Still NEW SHREWSBURY — The director, later said vehicle rev- snowstorm which roared in on enue totalling $50,000 was lost the eastern section of the country luring and immediately after the Dec. 12 cost tthe New Jersey torm. Highway Authority a cool $100,- To this was added $9,000 in 000. jverime paid to parkway main Mrs. Katharine Elkus White, :enance workers; $26,000 to out- chairman of the authority which side contractors who are hired Missing in Atlantic operates the Garden State Park- :o help with snow removal, and way, praised employees and (15,000 for salt spread on the state police for the "magnificant •oadway to prevent icing. job" in keeping the parkway open Mr, Levy said 9,000 trucks to traffic when other roads were most of which usually use th»l snowed under. New Jersey Turnpike, took ad One Man Milton Levy, public relations vantage of a "grace" period sot by the authority to use the park way to travel north. Cloudy, Cold Lifted Ban Aboard Trucks are allowed to use the parkway only as far north as Christmas Lakewood. -
1927/28 - 2007 Гг
© Роман ТАРАСЕНКО. г. Мариуполь 2008г. Украина. [email protected] Лауреаты премии Американской Академии Киноискусства «ОСКАР». 1927/28 - 2007 гг. 1 Содержание Наменование стр Кратко о премии………………………………………………………. 6 1927/28г……………………………………………………………………………. 8 1928/29г……………………………………………………………………………. 9 1929/30г……………………………………………………………………………. 10 1930/31г……………………………………………………………………………. 11 1931/32г……………………………………………………………………………. 12 1932/33г……………………………………………………………………………. 13 1934г……………………………………………………………………………….. 14 1935г……………………………………………………………………………….. 15 1936г……………………………………………………………………………….. 16 1937г……………………………………………………………………………….. 17 1938г……………………………………………………………………………….. 18 1939г……………………………………………………………………………….. 19 1940г……………………………………………………………………………….. 20 1941г……………………………………………………………………………….. 21 1942г……………………………………………………………………………….. 23 1943г……………………………………………………………………………….. 25 1944г……………………………………………………………………………….. 27 1945г……………………………………………………………………………….. 29 1946г……………………………………………………………………………….. 31 1947г……………………………………………………………………………….. 33 1948г……………………………………………………………………………….. 35 1949г……………………………………………………………………………….. 37 1950г……………………………………………………………………………….. 39 1951г……………………………………………………………………………….. 41 2 1952г……………………………………………………………………………….. 43 1953г……………………………………………………………………………….. 45 1954г……………………………………………………………………………….. 47 1955г……………………………………………………………………………….. 49 1956г……………………………………………………………………………….. 51 1957г……………………………………………………………………………….. 53 1958г……………………………………………………………………………….. 54 1959г……………………………………………………………………………….. 55 1960г………………………………………………………………………………. -
1961-62 Year Book Canadian Motion Picture Industry
e&xri-i METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYERtl WITH THESE CURRENT AMD CANADIAN OPENING! TORO NTO—October 2t UNIVERSITY THEATRE MONTREAL—November 2 ALOUETTE THEATRE Metro-Golduyn-Mayer present. VANCOUVER-Dec. 21 Samuel Bronston's Proaua STANLEY THEATRE IRAMA TECHNICOLOR JEFFREY HUNTER'■ SIOBHAN McKENNA • HURD HATFIELD-RON RANDELL • VIVECA LINDFORS-RITA GAM • CARMEN SEVILLA • BRIGID BAZLEN HARRY GUARDINO • RIP TORN • FRANK THRING • GUY ROLFE • MAURICE MARSAC • GREGOIRE ASLAN • ROBERT RYAN^n,^. Screen Play by PHILIP YORDAN * Directed by NICHOLAS RAY • Produced by SAMUEL BRONSTON METRO GOLDWYN MAYER PRESENTS METRO GOLDWYN MAYER presents a JULIAN BLAUSTEIN production <cMy\KMFY HI</\NI)C) Starring AS FLETCHER CHRISTIAN ri<i-\OR Howard GLENN FORD AS CAPTAIN BUGH INGRID THULIN CHARLES BOYER RICHARD HARRIS AS JOHN mills IN AN ARCOLA PRODUCTION LEE J. COBB PAUL HENREID co starring QMUTluvy qjvT ui'HTt BcyujViy PAUL LUKAS YVETTE MIMIEUX KARL BOEHN co-sTunim HUGH GRIFFITH RICHARD HAYDN »»»TARITA screen play by ROBERT ARDREY and JOHN GAY BASED ON THf NOVEL BVCHARLES NOROHOff AND JAMS S NORMIN HAH based on the novel by directed by omcnm.LEWIS MILESTONE PRODUCE 0 BY AARON ROSENBERG VICENTE BLASCO IBANEZ • VINCENTE MINNELLI TECHNICOLOR • FILMED IN ULTRA PANAVISION in CINEMASCOPE and METROCOLOR 19 CONTINUES ITS SUCCESS STORY COMING BOX-OFFICE ATTRACTIONS! BRIDGE TO THE SUN BACHELOR IN PARADISE CARROLL BAKER, James Shigeta, BOB HOPE, LANA TURNER, James Yagi, Emi Florence Hirsch, Janis Paige, Jim Hutton, Paula Prentiss, Nori Elizabeth Hermann. Don Porter, Virginia Grey, Agnes Moorehead. A Cite Films Production. A Ted Richmond Production. ★ In CinemaScope and Metrocolor SWEET BIRD OF YOUTH ★ PAUL NEWMAN, GERALDINE PAGE, TWO WEEKS IN ANOTHER TOWN Shirley Knight, Ed Begley, Rip Torn, KIRK DOUGLAS, Mildred Dunnock. -
MOPE THAN Englituf
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 04E 247 TE 002 170 TITLE More Than English Mates Happening in the Senior High Englictl C'Irriculum of the Anchorage Borough School District) and Addendum, 1970-71. INSTITUTION Greater Anchorage Area Borough School District, Alaska. PUB DATE jun 69 NOTE 14)-T. EDRS PRICE EDFS Price M,'-$0.6E HC-$6.58 DESCRIPTORS American Literature, Business English, *Composition Skills (Literary), Creative Writing, Critical Thinking, Debate, *Elective Subjects, *English Programs, Grammar, Humanities, Independent Study, Instructional Materials, Journalism, *Language Shills, Literary Criticism, Literary Genres, *Literature, Mass Media, Readinr; Skills, Theater Arts, World Literature AFSTRACT The dual objectives of this nongraded, phasE-elective program in English are to teach critical analysis in reading, listening, and viewing, and to teach logical ovgani7ation in thinking, writing, and speaking. Provided are the school district requirements, an explanation of the five phase levels, and brief cutlines of eaoh of 57 course offerings which include course descriptions, objectives, and suggested classroom materials, reference bocks for teachers, and teaching approaches. The subject areas treated are composition (e.g., business English, creative writing, and journalism); speech and drama (e.g., fundamentals of acting, play production, debate, and theatrical makeup) ;reading (e. g. , corrective reading and reading workshop) ;language (e.g., grammar--traditional and transformational); literature (e.g., hutEcr in literature, existential literature, literary criticism, Russian literature, Asian literature, nonfiction, biography, and the modern American novel); mass media; inderendent study; and humanities. An Addendum describes new course offerings for 1970-71. (MF) S DEPARTMENT Of '111,1111. fOVATION 8, WELFARE MU OF EDUCATION 1113 DOCUMENT HAS B1E1 REPRODUCED EXACTLY As RICVVED FROM THE PERSON OR ORGANIZATION ORIO1/ATINO IT.POINTS OF VIEW OR OPINIONS STATED DO 001 NEEISSARISY PtPRIStNI WW1 DIM OF TOOTAION POSITION OR POLICY. -
At Summer School Maonythef~ 17-Year-Old Stc!R+Ed Steal
'.' , w ..... ". o o )\11the News o of All the Pointes * * * Every Thursd"y rosse Morning ews- Complete News Coverage of All the Pointes " flome ot tbe News VOLUME 23-NO. 32 Entered as Seeond Class Matter at the PM OUice at Detroit, Mich, GROSSE POINTE. MICHIGAN, AUGUST 9. 1962 '1c Per Copy M.OO Per Year" 16 PAGES-THREE SECTIONS-SECTION I c ---:----------;---------------'--------------------------.:..----------:-------------------------c~ '. .-------------------. HEADLINES Babe ,Ruth, Champs of City, Park, farmsd oj the . ~"""',-............. Records AgaIn Set Me~tally I~ ,,' :J - Youth Adnnts \VEEK ~ As Compi!ed by the Grosse Pointe News At Summer School MaonyThef~ 17-Year-Old Stc!r+ed Steal .. Thursday, August 2 i[19 at 13;, Now Con .. A CONDEMNED KILLER Attended by 1,508 fined to Institution Was spared his life yesterday by the governor of Illinois. A 17-year-old Shores boy, Paul C l' Um P. a 32-year-old Six Weeks Session Just Concluded Called Most Suc~ whose crime career began Negro convicted of slaying an unarmed guard in a Chicago cessful; All Public Schools and 16 Local Private and at the age of 13 years, con- holdup in 1953, had fought a Parochial Ones Represented fessed to a number of .bur- legal battle with authorities -------- glaries and larcenies in the ever since convicted and had Summer School enrollments continued this year Pointe and other cornmuni- managed to stay his 'execution at the same high level established in 1961. when all ties in the Detroit'area, Still 14 times. By his action Wednes- records were smashed. A total of 1,508 students were Dther burglaries he admit. -
Film Technology, Adaptation, and a History of the Hollywood Novel, 1920-1950
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE Fleeting Fictions: Film Technology, Adaptation, and a History of the Hollywood Novel, 1920-1950 A Dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English by Justin Richard Gautreau June 2015 Dissertation Committee: Dr. Katherine Kinney, Chairperson Dr. Tom Lutz Dr. Sherryl Vint Copyright by Justin Richard Gautreau 2015 The Dissertation of Justin Richard Gautreau is approved: Committee Chairperson University of California, Riverside Acknowledgements Since this dissertation in some ways began long before my time in my graduate school, my thanks could go on and on. For practical purposes, let me acknowledge those who have influenced it most directly. First, I would like to thank Rob Latham who has supported my academic interests in Hollywood from the very beginning. I remember sitting with him at a Starbucks on Blaine and Iowa in Riverside as an insecure first-year graduate student, hesitantly asking him if Hollywood was an acceptable topic for scholarly pursuit, to which he bluntly replied, “Why not?” His mentorship and support over the years have inspired me to accomplish things I never thought possible for myself. Next, I want to thank Katherine Kinney, whose intellectual approach to film and literary studies has provided me with a model for my own scholarship. During my Ph.D. qualifying exams where I presented early ideas for the dissertation, she asked the game- changing question: “Does the Hays Office count as a film technology?” Her questions since then have continued to take my work to another level. Her patience and support as I struggled to complete the final sections of this dissertation mean more to me than she knows. -
Fords?...\Pprovai of Bond Issue Sought
EDISON JPORDS BEACON Woodbridge, Avenel, Colonia, Fords, Hopelavm, Iselin, Keasbey, Port Reading, Sewaren and Edison Publlibsd Weekly Woodbridgp, N. J., Thursday, April 4, 1963 taunt u lnd Glut Man I,V — NO- 8 On Thursday At P 0,, Woodbrldf*. N. J. Price Ten Centi ... Radio?.... Fords?.... un,)imHII>0E - A public fate-to-face debate In "Prlvate political debatet are no lonfer enough. Ton NewRecreationProgram auditorium suoh M Woodbridge Senior and I should meet In the moat public and adequate facility ,,, ,r nvtt Radio Station WCTC, New Brumwlck,, available so that alt the people of Woocrbrldte can make a ",tl • final" conrtltlona Outlined by Mayor Walter Zlr- judgment at to our respective capabilitieii to be mayor. ,',', \\ iiii.tm .1. Warren, hi* opponent In the April 16 The two previoUi 'debates' which you talk about were . , li, primaries. closed to the general public and thus many Interested per- i ,„ ni;iy«r hmt accepted the April 10 date »ubmltted tom Old not have an opportunity to hear from either of us. , w.irn'ii who ha? inildted that the debate be held "I am anxious to be heard and I am equally anxlou* to Have people hear you, Mr. Warren, and the only plan- |lir,h junior Hl»h School Mid include a third Drmo- Includes Girls, Adults, ,,'.' ,M.iuiMHy candkUte, Edward Kopper. In which this can properly be done Is In an auditorium, •i Warren said that both he and Mr. Kopper *U1 be wch aa Woodbridge High School which can *eat 1,200 peopl» instead of the less than 400 which can be seated , ,.„„!, school, April 10. -
1963-64 Year Book Canadian Motion Picture Industry
f ::iiji(S|S /]‘ji( i'viy. />m [ . .:' \ 1; V Hi '..! 'v !'.. ■ liiii-'' !i! II '■ ■ ;;!i!: \;’ / / —,1. ■ i & , ii !;! I i r r-; -V' i i vW x v - I •, ! • \ / t I \ i ; U 4- I: l/Y 1 wm; Vlil:l VISION kLiO'i 101:4 ■C!f!( !'i I ! Vi K4VIK MGM IS ON POWERFUL, EXCITING 23 BIG PICTURES "THE V.I.P.s” starring Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Louis Jourdan, Elsa Martinelli, Margaret Rutherford, Maggie Smith, Rod Taylor and Orson Welles. Written by Terence Rattigan, directed by Anthony Asquith and produced by Anatole De Grunwald. (COLOR.) "THE HAUNTING" starring Julie Harris, Claire Bloom, Richard Johnson and Russ Tamblyn. Screen play by Nelson Gidding, directed and produced by Robert Wise. "HOOTENANNY HOOT” the country’s newest craze and M-G-M has got it. Screen play by James B. Gordon, directed by Gene Nelson, produced by Sam Katzman. TWILIGHT OF HONOR ” starring Richard Chamberlain, Nick Adams, Claude Rains, Joan Blackman, James Gregory and Joey Heatherton. Screen play by Henry Denker, directed by Boris Sagal, a Perlberg-Seaton Production. ” THE WHEELER DEALERS” starring Lee Remick, James Garner, Phil Harris, Chill Wills, Jim Backus, Louis Nye, John Astin, Elliot Reid and Patricia Crowley. Screen play by George J. W. Goodman and Ira Wallach, directed by Arthur Hiller, A Martin Ransohoff Pro¬ duction. (COLOR) "THE PRIZE” starring Paul Newman, Elke Sommer, Diane Baker, Micheline Presle, Gerard Oury, Sergio Fantoni, Kevin McCarthy and Edward G. Robinson. Screen play by Ernest Lehman, directed by Mark Robson and produced by Pandro S. Berman. (COLOR) "SUNDAY IN NEW YORK’'starring Cliff Robertson, Jane Fonda, and Rod Taylor.