The Great Flamarion
The Great Flamarion, expert marksman, is entertaining people in a show which features Connie, beautiful woman and her husband Al. Flamarion and Connie fall in love and decide to get rid of the alcoholic husband.
The Great Flamarion, expert marksman, is entertaining people in a show which features Connie, beautiful woman and her husband Al. Flamarion and Connie fall in love and decide to get rid of the alcoholic husband.
A Taste of Praise (2023) starring Eddie McClintock – the story of the Colorado cake baker who took a stand for religious freedom. And nearly lost his business, among death threats and other hassles.
Night of the Living Dead (1968) – George A. Romero’s reinvention of the zombie genre – stranded in a farmhouse, a group of strangers must fight for survival…
Song lyrics to Time Will Tell, Written by Eddie Cherkose and Jacques Press. Sung by Connie Haines with Freddie Rich and His Orchestra in “A Wave, a WAC and a Marine“, as performed by her on The Abbott and Costello Radio Program episode, “Date with Connie Haines“
In Monster from a Prehistoric Planet, a Japanese tycoon sends out an expedition to a remote South Pacific island. Their purpose: to recover rare animals for an attraction he’s building. Arriving with reporters in tow, the expedition soon discovers a small reptilian creature in an underground cavern.
In D.O.A., Frank Bigelow, told he’s been poisoned and has only a few days to live, tries to find out who killed him and why.
Hide your heart from sight, lock your dreams at night
It could happen to you
Don’t count stars or you might stumble
Someone drops a sigh and down you tumble
In Space Master X-7 – when a simple living organism is brought back from outer space, it has a voracious appetite …
Oh Happy Day (1952) is not the famous Gospel song. It’s the story of a young man in love – one of the first tunes showing the power of teenagers’ tastes in the music industry.
The song was originally recorded — and copyrighted — by Don Howard, a high school student who had learned the song secondhand, and modified it. The song’s originator, Nancy Binns Reed, heard his version of the song, and within weeks of its release sued to claim songwriter credit. Reed and Howard eventually settled, with each receiving co-writer credits