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Search Results for "robertson"
There are 412 Retriever pages mentioning "robertson":
  1. Cliff Robertson
    Charly Gordon (Cliff Robertson) is a grown man with the mind of a child. By day he leads a simple life working as a sweeper in a Boston bakery, where he is often the butt of cruel jokes from his co-workers. At night he attends classes taught by the beautiful and compassionate Alice Kinian (Claire Bloom). Alice is touched by Charly’s eagerness to learn and convinces him to undergo experimental surgery in an effort to cure his mental deficiency.
  2. Allan Robertson
    For 33 years, Allan Robertson was the principal of the collegiate in Hamiota, so it is understandable that he knows just about everyone in the community. Upon retirement, Robertson could recount the joys he has had in a career that spanned three decades.
  3. Kathleen Robertson
    Kathleen Robertson is a celebrated film and television actress of Canada. She was born in 1973 at Hamilton in Ontario province of Canada. She began her career as a child artist when she was just 10 years old. She is best known in the film industry for her varied roles in several successful Hollywood films
  4. Robertson Davies
    Robertson Davies was a Canadian novelist, playwright, and journalist. His first three novels—called the Salterton trilogy—are social comedies examining the eccentricities of a small Ontario university town. They are Tempest-Tost (1951), Leaven of Malice (1954), and A Mixture of Frailties (1958). In the three novels known as the Deptford trilogy, Davies explored the relationship between magic, religion, and psychology. These novels are Fifth Business (1970), The Manticore (1972), and World of Wonders (1975). The Cornish trilogy is still more absorbed in Canadian history and exotic lore.
  5. Robertson Davies -- William Robertson Davies
    William Robertson Davies, CC, FRSC, FRSL (born August 28, 1913, at Thamesville, Ontario, and died December 2, 1995 at Orangeville, Ontario) was a Canadian novelist, playwright, critic, journalist, and professor. He was one of Canada's best-known and most popular authors, and one of its most distinguished "men of letters", a term Davies is sometimes said to have detested.[1] Davies was the founding Master of Massey College, a graduate college at the University of Toronto.
  6. Allan Robertson -- Young Tom
    Robertson clearly did not approve of the new gutta percha ball that was just coming into vogue. He even made Young Tom Morris, who worked in Allan's shop, promise never to play with a guttie. When Young Tom ran out of feathery balls in a match, his playing companion gave him a gutta percha to play. As Young Tom related in Golf Illustrated of the event "...as we were playing in, it so happened that we met Allan Robertson coming out, and someone told him I was playing a very good game with one of the new gutta percha balls, and I could see fine, from the expression on his face, that he did not like it at all and, when we met afterwards in his shop, we had some high words about the matter, and there and then parted company, I leaving his employment."
  7. Cliff Robertson -- La Jolla
    The War for Independence is brought to life in this acclaimed series that uses battle re-enactments, rare documents and the voices of Kelsey Grammer, Cliff Robertson and others to trace the history of the conflict. The set includes six programs: "The Conflict Ignites," "1776," "Washington and Arnold," "The World at War," "England's Last Chance" and "Birth of the Republic." 300 min. total.
  8. Allan Robertson -- St Andrews
    Mid-19th Century professional golfers like Allan Robertson often derived a significant portion of their incomes through wagering on golf. The concept of giving strokes allowed Robertson to set up matches with golfers who weren't at his level.
  9. Cliff Robertson -- Academy Award
    Cliff Robertson’s investment in Charly paid off, and won him the Academy Award as Best Actor for his performance. The movie’s success ... helped book sales for Flowers for Algernon, which had been expanded into a novel and was used as an educational tool in schools across America. Bantam Books, the publisher, launched a joint project with the film where it sponsored a series of screenings for educators in major cities at which Cliff Robertson would often make personal appearances.
  10. Cliff Robertson -- New York
    Based on Ken Follett's novel, this WWII thriller stars Cliff Robertson as a British Army officer who battles a half-German, half-Arab spy (David Soul) in a dangerous cat-and-mouse game in North Africa. Season Hubley, Anthony Quayle, Robert Culp ... star. 190 min. This tape is new. Manufacturer: Worldvision Home Video Inc.
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