Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A television movie called Hidden in Silence which tells their story, was made in 1996 by Richard A. Colla with screenplay by Stephanie Liss, featuring Kellie Martin as Fusia (Stefania), Gemma Coughlan as Helena, and Tom Radcliffe as Max. [9] Reese Witherspoon's YA Book Club Pick gives Stefania's biography: "The Light in Hidden Places" the Pick ...
1996 United States Hidden in Silence: Richard A. Colla: A True Story about the Podgórski sisters who rescued 13 Jews from the Przemyśl Ghetto. 1996 United States The Empty Mirror: Barry J. Hershey 1996 United States The Man Who Captured Eichmann: William A. Graham: Based on the book Eichmann in My Hands by Peter Z. Malkin 1996 United States ...
Hidden in America is a 1996 American television film about poverty in the United States. The film is directed by Martin Bell and stars Beau Bridges, Bruce Davison, Alice Krige, Jeff Bridges, Frances McDormand, and Jena Malone. Beau Bridges plays Bill Januson, a father struggling to support his family and whose pride and optimism prevent him ...
The comments sparked a standing ovation from the crowd and got her co-stars, especially Octavia Spencer and Janelle Monae, totally fired up.
Sins of Silence is a 1996 American drama television film directed by Sam Pillsbury and written by Shelley Evans, from a story by Evans and Kathryn Montgomery. Inspired by actual events, the film stars Holly Marie Combs and Lindsay Wagner. Though set in San Diego, California, it was filmed in Toronto. [1]
If Claes Bang didn’t exist so suavely before our eyes, you’d say they don’t make movie stars like him any more: debonair, mature but with sparky wit, and possessed of a flexible accent that ...
Nearly three decades before Daisy Edgar-Jones and Glen Powell’s 2024 sequel Twisters, there was the OG 1996 film Twister starring Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton. Hunt and Paxton played an estranged ...
Her Hidden Truth is a thriller/drama television film starring Kellie Martin, Antonio Sabato Jr. and Ken Howard. It was directed by Dan Lerner and written by Pamela K. Long, who was also one of the film's producers. [1] The film first aired on Sunday, November 12, 1995 on NBC. [2]