Lee Remick Videos

Home > L > Lee Remick > Videos

Click on an image to view the video.

The Omen trailer
The original theatrical trailer for the 1976 horror classic "The Omen," starring Gregory Peck and Lee Remick.
The Omen?1977? - Ave Satani
?stereo(URL last "&fmt=18")? music?Jerry Goldsmith ???? ????????director? Richard Donner ??????????cast? Gregory Peck ????????? ?Robert Thorn? Lee Remick ??????? ?Katherine Thorn? David Warner ??????????? ?Jennings? Billie Whitelaw ?????????? ?Mrs.Baylock? Leo Mckern ???????? ?Bugenhagen? Harvey Stephens ????????????? ?Damien? Patrick Troughton ??????????? ?Father Brennan? Anthony Nicholls ?????????? ?Dr.Becker? Martin Benson ?????????? ?Father Spiletto? Sheila Raynor ?Mrs.Horton? Holly Palance ?Nanny? Robert Macleod ?????????? ?Horton? John Stride ????????? ?The Psychiatrist? en.wikipedia.org ?Title? Omen / Omen 666 / Omen 666, The / Omen The / The Omen / The Omen 666 / ???????
Henry Mancini - The Days Of Wine And Roses
The song was composed by Henry Mancini with lyrics by Johnny Mercer, and it received the Academy Award for the Best Original Song in 1963. It was composed for the film of the same name starring Jack Lemmon and Lee Remick, and this recording entered the Billboard Top 40 in March of '63.. "The Days of Wine and Roses" represents a pinnacle of sorts for two musical giants, Mancini and Mercer, at the very peak of their profession.
Marilyn Monroe in Something's Got To Give
I do not own this material,no copyright intended,it is purely a fan video. Something's Got to Give is one of the most notorious unfinished films in Hollywood history.It was produced in 1962 by a then-floundering 20th Century Fox. The film paired the studio's most bankable star of the 1950s ? Marilyn Monroe ? with Dean Martin and Cyd Charisse. With a troubled star and belligerent director, George Cukor, causing delays on a daily basis the film quickly descended into a costly debacle. On the first day of production, April 23, 1962, Monroe telephoned Weinstein to tell him that she had a severe sinus infection, and would not be on the set that morning. Apparently, she had caught the infection after a trip to New York City during which she had visited her acting coach, Lee Strasberg of The Actors Studio, to go over her role. The studio sent staff doctor Lee Siegel to examine the star at her home. His diagnosis would have postponed the movie for a month, but George Cukor refused to wait. Instead, Cukor reorganized his shooting schedule to film scenes around his leading lady. At 7:30am, Cyd Charisse was telephoned at her residence with a request that she come to the Fox lot as soon as possible. Later that morning, the very first scene captured on film involved Martin's character and Charisse, in an encounter with children building a tree house. Over the next month production continued mostly without Monroe, who showed up only occasionally. The production began to fall behind ...
Legendary Couple in The Long, Hot Summer (1958)
The Long, Hot Summer marks Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman's first cinematic collaboration. Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward married after the completion of the movie. Legendary actors were married for 50 years, 7 months and 28 days, until Mr. Newman's death September 26, 2008. Starring: Paul Newman as Ben Quick Joanne Woodward as Clara Varner Orson Welles as Will Varner Anthony Franciosa as Jody Varner Lee Remick as Eula Varner Angela Lansbury as Minnie Littlejohn Richard Anderson as Alan Stewart Sarah Marshall as Agnes Stewart Mabel Albertson as Mrs. Stewart
Anatomy of a Murder - Trailer
Anatomy of a Murder is an American 1959 trial court drama film directed by Otto Preminger and written by Wendell Mayes based on the best-selling novel of the same name written by Michigan Supreme Court Justice John D. Voelker under the pen name Robert Traver. Traver based the novel on a 1952 murder case in which he was the defense attorney. The picture stars Jimmy Stewart, George C. Scott, Lee Remick, Ben Gazzara, Arthur O'Connell, Eve Arden, Kathryn Grant, Orson Bean, and Murray Hamilton.
Telefon (1977) US Trailer Charles Bronson, Don Siegel
US trailer to the classic 1977 thriller starring Charles Bronson. Directed by Don Siegel. Also Starring Donald Pleasance, Lee Remick and Tyne Daly.
The Long Hot Summer (1958) trailer
Directed by Martin Ritt, starring Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, Anthony Franciosa, Orson Welles, Lee Remick, Angela Lansbury, Richard Anderson, etc.
The Tempest (1960 TV) Maurice Evans + Richard Burton 1/8
sure, this production suffers from many cuts and "simplification" of Shakespeare's language--but some fine performances! Maurice Evans (3 June 1901 12 March 1989) was an English actor acclaimed for his Shakespearean performances in the 1930s and 40s, most especially some famous productions on Broadway, and his pioneering television Shakespeare productions in the 1950s. But he is even better known (in America) as Samantha's father on the sitcom "Bewitched" and as the Puzzler on "Batman". Maurice Evans ... Prospero Lee Remick ... Miranda Roddy McDowall ... Ariel Liam Redmond ... Gonzalo
Best of Sondheim's Follies
"Follies" is a musical with music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and a book by James Goldman. Several of its songs have become standards, including "Broadway Baby," "I'm Still Here," "Too Many Mornings," "Could I Leave You?" and "Losing My Mind." The play was nominated for eleven Tonys and won seven. "Follies" is set in a crumbling Broadway theatre, scheduled for demolition, during a reunion for all the past members of the "Weismann's Follies," a musical revue (based on the Ziegfeld Follies) which played in that theatre between the World Wars. The musical focuses on two couples, Buddy and Sally Durant Plummer and Ben and Phyllis Rogers Stone, who are attending the reunion. Sally and Phyllis were both showgirls in the Follies as were many of the other guests. Both marriages are having problems because Buddy, a traveling salesman, is having an affair with a girl on the road, Sally is still in love with Ben as she was years ago, and Ben is so self-absorbed that Phyllis feels emotionally abandoned. The two couples interact with each other and other partygoers, and throughout the first half, musical numbers from the old Follies are performed by the characters, sometimes accompanied by the ghosts of their former selves. Most of the songs are pastiches of songs by popular songwriters of the past. "Losing My Mind" is in the style of a George Gershwin ballad, The "God-Why-Don't-You-Love-Me Blues" is in the style of Cole Porter and "Loveland" is akin to a 1920s Ziegfeld Follies ...



Copyright © 2012 NetVision. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Statement
Celebrity Link
Contents
Home
New Additions
Write to any Celebrity
Top 30
Make Money
Birthdays
Celebrity Shop
Place a Button
Add a Site
Report dead/changed Site
Feedback

Other Sites
Celebrity Site of the Day
Celebrity Search
CelebMatch.com