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Two Guys from Milwaukee (UK title: Royal Flush) is a 1946 American comedy film directed by David Butler, and starring Dennis Morgan, Jack Carson and Joan Leslie. [2] It was distributed by Warner Bros. The film is about a Balkan prince who wants to see for himself what America is really like.
One More Tomorrow (1946) (with Ann Sheridan and Jane Wyman) – Patrick 'Pat' Regan; Two Guys from Milwaukee (1946) (with Dennis Morgan) – Buzz Williams; The Time, the Place and the Girl (1946) (with Dennis Morgan and Janis Paige) – Jeff Howard; Love and Learn (1947) (with Martha Vickers) – Jingles Collins
[3] They were reunited in Two Guys from Milwaukee (1946) and The Time, the Place and the Girl (1946). [citation needed] Without Carson, Morgan made a Western, Cheyenne (1946), a musical My Wild Irish Rose (1947), and To the Victor (1948). In 1947, he was voted Singer of the Year. [10]
June 1, 1946: One More Tomorrow: June 22, 1946: Janie Gets Married: July 6, 1946: A Stolen Life: co-production with B.D. Production July 20, 1946: Of Human Bondage: July 26, 1946: Two Guys from Milwaukee: August 3, 1946: Night and Day: August 31, 1946: The Big Sleep: Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1997 September 14, 1946: Shadow of ...
Cinderella Jones (1946) as Gabriel Popik; Two Guys from Milwaukee (1946) as Count Oswald; Never Say Goodbye (1946) as Luigi; The Time, the Place and the Girl (1946) as Ladislaus Cassel; Cynthia (1947) as Professor Rosenkrantz; April Showers (1948) as Mr. Curley; Romance on the High Seas (1948) as Uncle Lazlo Lazlo; Embraceable You (1948) as ...
The darkest chapter in Milwaukee's history was authored by Dahmer, who was arrested in 1991 and later admitted to killing 16 young men and boys (with 17 victims overall).
There were not one, but two Fonzies on Milwaukee's downtown RiverWalk recently. There's always the Bronze Fonz, the life-size statue that pays tribute to the iconic "Happy Days" character.. But ...
Earlier, at Universal-International, he had received his initial writing credit on a low-budget mystery before moving on to Warner Brothers, where he wrote Two Guys from Milwaukee (1946), a comedy that featured Jack Carson, one of the four main performers in Romance.