Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The American films of 1959 are listed in a table of the films which were made in the United States and released in 1959. The film Ben-Hur won the Academy Award for Best Picture , among winning a record-setting eleven Oscars .
Solomon and Sheba is a 1959 American Biblical epic historical drama film directed by King Vidor, shot in Technirama (color by Technicolor), and distributed by United Artists. [3] The film dramatizes events described in the tenth chapter of First Kings and the ninth chapter of Second Chronicles .
Opening Title Production company Cast and crew Ref. J A N U A R Y: 6 Houseguest: Hollywood Pictures / Caravan Pictures: Randall Miller (director); Michael J. Di Gaetano, Lawrence Gay (screenplay); Sinbad, Phil Hartman, Kim Greist, Kim Murphy, Chauncey Leopardi, Talia Seider, Paul Ben-Victor, Tony Longo, Jeffrey Jones, Stan Shaw, Ron Glass, Kevin Jordan, Mason Adams, Patricia Fraser, Don ...
February 1959 11 February The Hanging Tree; 12 February The Black Orchid; 15 February No Name on the Bullet; Ride Lonesome; 17 February House on Haunted Hill; 19 February The Journey; 22 February Model for Murder; 24 February Make Mine a Million ; 26 February City of Fear; March 1959 3 March The Giant Behemoth; A Stranger in My Arms; 4 March Up ...
The Best of Everything is a 1959 American drama film directed by Jean Negulesco from a screenplay by Edith Sommer and Mann Rubin, based on the 1958 novel of the same name by Rona Jaffe. [2] It stars Hope Lange , Stephen Boyd , Suzy Parker , Martha Hyer , Diane Baker , Brian Aherne , Robert Evans , Louis Jourdan , and Joan Crawford .
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
March 26, 1959: Tempest: April 8, 1959: Thunder in the Sun: June 16, 1959: Don't Give Up the Ship: June 17, 1959: The Hangman: June 18, 1959: The Five Pennies: June 1959: The Man Who Could Cheat Death: July 8, 1959: Tarzan's Greatest Adventure: distribution only; produced by Solar Film Productions [N 5] July 29, 1959: Last Train from Gun Hill ...
Take a Giant Step is a 1959 American coming-of-age drama film directed by Philip Leacock.. The plot concerns a black teenager living in a predominantly white environment and having trouble coping as he reaches an age at which the realities of racism are beginning to affect his life more directly and pointedly than they had in his childhood.