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  2. Jason Robards Sr. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jason_Robards_Sr.

    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 ...

  3. Jason Robards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jason_Robards

    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 ...

  4. List of Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre episodes

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Bob_Hope_Presents...

    Bob Hope had played Eddie Foy Sr. in the 1955 film of the same name. In this Chrysler Theatre presentation, Eddie Foy Jr. plays his own father (reprising the role he played in the 1942 film Yankee Doodle Dandy ), Mickey Rooney plays George M. Cohan , and the Foy children are played by The Osmond Brothers .

  5. The Iceman Cometh (The Play of the Week) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Iceman_Cometh_(The...

    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 ...

  6. List of Raising Hope characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Raising_Hope...

    Played by identical twins Baylie and Rylie Cregut, Hope Chance (born Princess Beyonce Carlyle), Jimmy and Lucy's daughter, Virginia and Burt's granddaughter and Maw Maw's great-great-granddaughter. Hope was conceived in Jimmy's van when he went out to get bubblegum ice cream and met a distressed Lucy Carlyle with whom he had a one-night stand.

  7. Oh No Not My Baby - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oh_No_Not_My_Baby

    In 1973 Rod Stewart (backed by his Faces bandmates Ron Wood, Kenney Jones and Ian McLagan) charted with "Oh No Not My Baby"; his self-produced version — a single with no parent album — reached #6 UK in September 1973 subsequently reaching #59 on the U.S. charts, [5] and #51 on the Canadian charts before the year's end. [6]

  8. Maxine (Sharon O'Neill song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maxine_(Sharon_O'Neill_song)

    "Maxine" is a song by New Zealand singer and songwriter Sharon O'Neill. The song was released in May 1983 as the second single from her fourth studio album, Foreign Affairs (1983). The song peaked at number 16 in Australia and New Zealand. It remain's O'Neill's highest charting single in Australia.

  9. New Frontier (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Frontier_(song)

    The narrator of the song is a "gawky teenager circa 1962", [1] who has also been described as a "wannabe hipster." [2] He opens the song with discussion of his family's backyard fallout shelter—which he casually describes as "'just a dugout that my dad built, in case the reds decide to push the button down."