Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Michael Sheard (born Michael Lawson Perkins; 18 June 1938 – 31 August 2005) [2] was a Scottish actor who featured in many films and television programmes, and was best known for playing villains. His most prominent television role was as strict deputy headmaster Maurice Bronson in the children's series Grange Hill , which he played between ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Michael Sheard as the general manager of the bus depot who is seen frequently throughout the seventh and final series. He often argues with Blakey about something that the latter has done. He was also the judge at the gardening competition in the episode "Gardening Time". Sheard also played the general manager in the Holiday On The Buses film.
The Road to Corinth ( French: La route de Corinthe, Italian: Criminal story, also released as Who's Got the Black Box? ) is a 1967 French-Italian Eurospy film directed by Claude Chabrol . [ 2 ] It was based on the 1966 novel by Claude Rank [ fr ] , pseudonym of Gaston-Claude Petitjean-Darville (1925-2004).
La Traversée de Paris: Claude Autant-Lara: Jean Gabin, Bourvil: Comedy / Drama: Les Assassins du dimanche: Alex Joffé: Barbara Laage, Dominique Wilms, Jean-Marc Thibault, Paul Frankeur: Drama: The Light Across the Street: Georges Lacombe: Raymond Pellegrin, Roger Pigaut, Brigitte Bardot: Crime: Maigret Leads the Investigation: Stany Cordier
Michel Noll (born 10 May 1949) is a French television director and producer.. Born in Cologne in Germany, Noll has lived in France for more than 40 years.After reading Economics and Sociology at the University of Cologne in Germany, he became a producer/director of television programmes when, in 1977, he joined TELECIP in Paris, then the leading French independent production company.