Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The Luck of the Irish: Directed by Henry Koster. With Tyrone Power, Anne Baxter, Cecil Kellaway, Lee J. Cobb. Following American reporter Stephen Fitzgerald from Ireland to New York, a grateful leprechaun acts as the newsman's servant and conscience.

  2. As a character actor, Cecil Kellaway was easily recognized by millions of moviegoers, even though they usually could not remember his name. However, producers, well aware of his polished, often funny and effectively underplayed performances, employed the heavyset, round‐faced, cherubic actor in more than 75 feature films since his arrival in Hollywood in 1938.

  3. Sospechando que Miriam y Drew persiguen el dinero de Charlotte, Velma busca ayuda del Sr. Willis (Cecil Kellaway), un investigador de seguros de Inglaterra que todavía está fascinado por el caso Mayhew, y que ha visitado a la viuda enferma de Mayhew, Jewel, quien le ha dado un sobre solo para ser abierto a su muerte.

  4. The former character actor Cecil Kellaway began acting in Australia, then came over to the United States for more film work in the late 1930s. His early turning point was playing Earnshaw in the 1939 screen adaptation of Emily Brontë's "Wuthering Heights," which starred Laurence Oliver and David Niven.

  5. Cecil Kellaway was born in Cape Town, South Africa, on August 22, 1890, as Cecil Lauriston Kellaway. He married Doreen Elizabeth Joubert (1919-1973), had two children, and remained with her until his death. Among his most important films are The Postman Always Rings Twice ...

  6. I Married a Witch: Directed by René Clair. With Fredric March, Veronica Lake, Robert Benchley, Susan Hayward. A beautiful 17th-century witch returns to life to plague politician Wallace Wooley, descendant of her persecutor.

  7. Biography. The former character actor Cecil Kellaway began acting in Australia, then came over to the United States for more film work in the late 1930s. His early turning point was playing Earnshaw in the 1939 screen adaptation of Emily Brontë's "Wuthering Heights," which starred Laurence Oliver and David Niven.