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[2]: 181–183 The Weatherford is "a centerpiece in the downtown district", [2]: 184 and the Orpheum next to it "represents a typical small-town theater located in the heart of downtown". [ 2 ] : 191 Originally a movie theater, the Orpheum no longer serves this function (the only movie theater in the city is a Harkins in East Flagstaff) [ 2 ...
Weedman was adopted and grew up in Indianapolis, moving to Seattle in 1995. Her marriage to Seattle writer Michael Neff ended in 2003. [3] She subsequently moved to Santa Monica, California and gave birth to a son, Leo, in 2010 with her longtime boyfriend, director Jeff Weatherford, [4] whom she married in 2012 and divorced the next year. [5]
Mary Virginia Martin (December 1, 1913 – November 3, 1990) was an American actress and singer. A muse of Rodgers and Hammerstein, she originated many leading roles on stage over her career, including Nellie Forbush in South Pacific (1949), the title character in Peter Pan (1954), and Maria von Trapp in The Sound of Music (1959).
Before Taylor Sheridan introduced the world to the ‘Yellowstone’-verse – and his avalanche of other TV content – he was a teenage weekend wrangler juggling acting dreams in his native Texas.
Finally, the Oscar-shortlisted Norwegian film “Armand” is expanding to more theaters, starring “The Worst Person in the World” breakout Renate Reinsve as a mother who must face a school ...
Stephen Carpenter, born in Weatherford, Texas, and raised in Kansas City, Missouri, [1] ... Los Angeles School of Theater, Film and Television. [1] [2] ...
The Weatherford Hotel and Orpheum Theater are still in use today. [ 22 ] The state of Arizona was admitted to the Union in 1912; one of the first two senators was Henry F. Ashurst , who had been born in Nevada but whose family moved to a ranch near Williams when he was two years old, with Ashurst attending school in Flagstaff. [ 42 ]
The Parker County Courthouse is an historic building located at Courthouse Square in Weatherford, Texas, the seat of Parker County.Built in 1884–1886, it was the county's fourth courthouse; the first was a wooden building, and the second and third both burned down.