Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The Official John Agar Website. Mailing Contact: 2109 S. Wilbur Ave. Walla Walla, WA 99362. E-mail: Time Machine Collectibles Fax: 509-525-0393. Biography. John was born in Chicago, Illinois on January 31st 1921. he is the oldest of four children born to John Agar Sr. and Lillian Rogers Agar. He attended Harvard School for Boys in Chicago ...

  2. John Agar worked with Wayne and Forrest Tucker in the 1949 war film ‘Sands of Iwo Jima’. He was cast as PFC Peter "Pete" Conway, an arrogant educated son of an officer, and earned rave reviews for his performance. The film was nominated for four Academy Awards.

  3. John Agar was born in Chicago, the eldest of four children. In World War II, Sgt. John Agar was a United States Army Air Force physical instructor. His 1945 marriage at the Wilshire Memorial Church to "America's Sweetheart" Shirley Temple put him in the public eye for the first time, and a movie contract with independent producer David O. Selznick quickly ensued.

  4. It Will Steal Your Body And Damn Your Soul!An evil alien brain, bent on world domination, takes over the body of an atomic scientist, while a “good” alien br...

  5. Biography by AllMovie [+] John Agar was one of a promising group of leading men to emerge in the years after World War II. He never became the kind of star that he seemed destined to become in mainstream movies, but he did find a niche in genre films a decade later. Agar was the son of a Chicago meatpacker and never aspired to an acting career ...

  6. 9 de abr. de 2002 · John Agar, whose marriage to Shirley Temple in the 1940s propelled him into an acting career that began promisingly with parts in two classic John Ford westerns but slid into a series of low ...

  7. 7 de abr. de 2002 · They were teamed together in the motion picture "Fort Apache" (1948); director John Ford's first of a trilogy of western cavalry movies starring John Wayne. They would both act together in a later movie, "Adventure in Baltimore" (1949), but Agar hit his peak in "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" (1949), and "Sands of Iwo Jima" (1949).