Ad
related to: diane baker films
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Baker was born February 25, 1938 [2] at Hollywood Presbyterian Hospital in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California and raised in the Los Angeles neighborhoods of North Hollywood and Studio City. She is the daughter of Dorothy Helen Harrington, who had appeared in several early Marx Brothers movies, and
The Ghost of Sierra de Cobre is a 1964 American made-for-television horror–thriller film starring Martin Landau, Judith Anderson and Diane Baker.It was written, produced and directed by Joseph Stefano, author of the screenplay for Alfred Hitchcock's 1960 thriller Psycho, [1] and he cast actors who had been in Hitchcock's films.
Mirage is a 1965 American neo noir thriller film starring Gregory Peck and Diane Baker, and released by Universal Pictures. [2] Directed by Edward Dmytryk [3] from a screenplay by Peter Stone, it is based on the 1952 novel Fallen Angel, written by Howard Fast under the pseudonym Walter Ericson; the novel is not credited by title onscreen. [4]
Della is a 1964 American made-for-television drama film starring Joan Crawford, Paul Burke, Charles Bickford and Diane Baker.Directed by Robert Gist, the film was originally produced by Four Star Television as a television pilot for a proposed NBC series named Royal Bay which was to star Burke as a lawyer and Bickford as his cantankerous, righteous father.
Crawford insisted on having a Pepsi-Cola machine placed in the secretaries break room in the film. [20] [better source needed] According to Diane Baker, much of Crawford's character was cut from the finished film, including a show-stopping drunk scene. This was reportedly due to the film's length. [21] [better source needed]
The film also stars Michael Craig, Edward Judd and Diane Baker. [2] The film is a remake of the 1939 Bette Davis film Dark Victory (1939), with Hayward in Davis's role. [1] The time period was updated and the setting changed to England. [1] It was shot at Shepperton Studios and on location around Britain, including at Polruan in Cornwall. [3] [4]
The film was written by Nelson Gidding and filmed in England and India with mainly white actors in prominent roles. It stars Horst Buchholz, Diane Baker, Jose Ferrer, and Robert Morley. It was shot in CinemaScope DeLuxe Color.
The film was a co-production between 20th Century-Fox and Joseph M. Schenck, who had been instrumental in helping establish Fox in 1935. [4] The film was produced by Charles Brackett, who said: Our picture describes action and events, with not the slightest shadow of Freud. The serious thing about Jules Verne is that all he does is tell a story ...