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Hope Maxine Glanville (m. 1914; div. 1927) Agnes Lynch (m. 1929) Children: Jason Robards: Jason Nelson Robards (December 31, 1892 – April 4, 1963) was an ...
Robards was born July 26, 1922, in Chicago, Illinois, the son of actor Jason Robards Sr. and Hope Maxine Robards (née Glanville). [1] He was of German, English, Welsh, Irish, and Swedish descent. [2] [3] The family moved to New York City when Jason Jr. was still a toddler, and then moved to Los Angeles when he was six years old. Later ...
Episode 1: The Bat by Mary Roberts Rinehart (31 March 1960) with Helen Hayes, Jason Robards, and Margaret Hamilton [2] Episode 2: The Burning Court by John Dickson Carr (24 April 1960) with George C. Scott and Barbara Bel Geddes; Episode 3: The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins (23 May 1960) with Walter Slezak, Siobhán McKenna and Lois Nettleton
Intertitle before a 1927 short. Vitaphone Varieties is a series title (represented by a pennant logo on screen) used for all of Warner Bros.', earliest short film "talkies" of the 1920s, initially made using the Vitaphone sound on disc process before a switch to the sound-on-film format early in the 1930s.
Enjoy a classic game of Hearts and watch out for the Queen of Spades!
Jason Robards, Jr. as Theodore "Hickey" Hickman; Myron McCormick as Larry Slade; Tom Pedi as Rocky Pioggi; James Broderick as Willie Oban; Farrell Pelly as Harry Hope; Robert Redford as Don Parritt; Ronald Radd as The Captain Cecil Lewis; Roland Winters as The General Piet Wetjoen; Harrison Dowd as James "Jimmy" Tomorrow; Michael Strong as ...
Going Home, a 2000 film starring Jason Robards and Clint Black; Going Home, a part of the 2002 Asian horror movie collaboration Three; Going Home, a 2014 Indian short film directed by Vikas Bahl, starring Alia Bhatt; Going Home, a 2015 Nigerian film directed by Chika Anadu
Cromwell was married to his third wife, Maxine MacFetridge, from April 24, 1948, [5] until her death on July 7, 1968. [6] Their daughter, Maxine Hope Cromwell (later Hopkins [7]), was born in New York on November 17, 1948. [8] Germaine Benjamin was Cromwell's fourth and last wife, from September 27, 1971, until her death in December 1986. [1]