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Beauty pageant coach Victor Melling ( Michael Caine ), whose reputation was ruined after his last contestant criticized his methods, teaches the tomboyish Hart how to dress, walk, and act like a contestant.
The 1910 season was marked by one of the most sensational transfers in Victorian football history, when Andy Curran masterminded the clearance of Carlton ’ s famed “ Big Four ” of ‘ Mallee ’ Johnson, Fred Jinks, Charlie Hammond and Frank ‘ Silver ’ Caine to North Melbourne.
Set in South Africa and starring Michael Caine and Sidney Poitier, the film was an action melodrama with a focus on apartheid.
However, the film was poorly received and ridiculed for a heavy-handed approach, and for the casting of Michael Caine as a Southern patriarch.
It was made into a film in 1965 produced by Harry Saltzman and directed by Sidney J. Furie, starring Michael Caine as the protagonist.
A film adaptation starring Michael Caine was released in 1965 and produced by the James Bond co-producer Harry Saltzman, assisted by several prominent members of the Bond production family.
The character's name was chosen by Caine, who was having lunch with Harry Saltzman.
In 1913 the London Missionary Society responded to the appeal of the To Tsai Church to provide a Headmaster for the project, sending Arnold Hughes to Hong Kong, and the college was re-opened as a middle school in 1914 in rented premises, first at 9 Caine Road, later at 45 Caine Road, and finally at 80 Bonham Road ( a former German Rhenish Mission property ).
Actor Michael Caine was born Maurice Micklewhite and chose the name Michael because he preferred the sound of it to the less glamorous-sounding " Maurice ".
He is perhaps most famous for his spy novel The IPCRESS File, which was made into a film starring Michael Caine.
Michael Caine was chosen to play the lead.
In his memoirs, Michael Caine says producer Harry Saltzman thought up the surname " Palmer ", and Caine innocently remarked that " Harry " was a dull name, not realising his gaffe until seeing Saltzman's stare.
In 1966 a film version of Funeral in Berlin was made starring Michael Caine and directed by Guy Hamilton.
In 2000, Caine was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in recognition of his contribution to cinema.
Caine was born in St Olave's Hospital, Rotherhithe, Southwark, the son of Ellen Frances Marie ( née Burchell ; 1900-1989 ), a cook and charwoman, and Maurice Joseph Micklewhite, a fish market porter.
Caine was brought up in his mother's Protestant religion ( his father was Catholic ).
Caine grew up in Southwark, South London, and during the Second World War, he was evacuated to North Runcton near King's Lynn in Norfolk.
Speaking to his agent from a telephone box in Leicester Square, London, he looked around for inspiration, noted that The Caine Mutiny was being shown at the Odeon Cinema in 1954, and decided to change his name to " Michael Caine ".
A big break came for Caine when he was cast as Meff in James Saunders ' Cockney comedy Next Time I'll Sing To You, when this play was presented at the New Arts Theatre in London on 23 January 1963.

Caine and two
Schaffner earned two more Emmy awards for his work on the 1955 TV adaptation of the Broadway play, The Caine Mutiny Court Martial, shown on the anthology series Ford Star Jubilee.
Michael Caine played Harry Palmer in the films based on three of the first four of the published novels featuring this character, and also later in two films not based on Len Deighton's novels.
In the mid-1990s there appeared two Harry Palmer films with original screenplays and starring Michael Caine:
Caine is one of only two actors nominated for an Academy Award for acting in every decade from the 1960s to 2000s ( the other one being Jack Nicholson ).
The Trip, starring Rob Brydon and Steve Coogan, featured improvised scenes in which the two leads argue over who can do the better Michael Caine impression.
Caine has published two volumes of memoirs, What's It All About?
The film depicts a mutiny aboard a fictitious World War II U. S. Navy destroyer minesweeper, the USS Caine ( DMS-18 ), and the subsequent court-martial of two officers.
Despite the fact Wouk had already worked the material from the novel into a stage play, The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial, which premiered on Broadway in January 1954 and ran for a year, Herman Wouk's attempt at writing the screenplay was considered " a disaster " by director Edward Dmytryk, and he was replaced by Stanley Roberts, who later quit when told to cut the film down to two hours.
Eric then contacts Corwin by Trump, who reveals that he knew about his plans from Caine and the two engage in a mental duel which Corwin is unable to break from.
Sessions also starred in Stella Street, a surreal " soap opera " comedy about a fantasy suburban British street inhabited by celebrities like Michael Caine and Al Pacino, which he conceived with fellow impressionist Phil Cornwell, the two of them playing several parts in each episode.
Based on an 1896 romantic novel The Manxman by Hall Caine, the director began work on the film just two weeks after the birth of his daughter, Patricia Hitchcock.
One winner, Marti Caine, returned to present the show when it was revived for two years between 1986 and 1988 by Central Television.
The group consists of two members-Rain and Taurus Caine.
From that point, the two kindled a friendship that would eventually see Taurus Caine moving to the west coast and back to launch a " street worthy " solo career, Rain moving to Birmingham, and launching a successful " ghost writing " career, and both artists ending up back in Montgomery, Alabama with the same manager.
To help promote Tonite Let's All Make Love in London ... Plus, the interviews with Michael Caine and Lee Marvin and the two extended instrumental tracks, " Nick's Boogie " and " Interstellar Overdrive ", were also released as a Pink Floyd CD.
However, Caine played Palmer in two later films, Bullet to Beijing and Midnight in Saint Petersburg.
Players control Dr. Caine as a puddle of ooze with a head, who can move around and use two attacks.
On 3 May 2006, Faure pleaded guilty and was sentenced to life imprisonment with a non-parole period of 19 years for the murders of Moran and Lewis Caine, who was killed two months after Moran.
Caine also hides two copies from Lisa, depositing them in the hotel's safe.
At the airport before flying home to Los Angeles, Caine realizes the two copies of the formula in the hotel safe were replaced with fakes by Lisa, and that the only real copies are with the LAPD and the Swiss.
In 1984 after the recording of the album Keep Moving and appearing in the promo clips for the two singles from that album – " Michael Caine " and " One Better Day " – Barson, who was one of the main songwriters and effectively the musical director, left the band to spend more time with his now ex-wife Sandra in Amsterdam.

Caine and films
Other films include The 25th Hour ( 1967 ), with Virna Lisi ; The Magus ( 1968 ), with Michael Caine and Candice Bergen, and based on the novel by John Fowles ; La Bataille de San Sebastian ( Guns for San Sebastian ) with Charles Bronson ; and The Shoes of the Fisherman, where he played a Catholic Archbishop in a Soviet Ukrainian prison who becomes Pope.
His first four novels featured an anonymous anti-hero, named " Harry Palmer " in the films, and portrayed by Michael Caine.
Renowned for his distinctive Cockney accent, Caine has appeared in over one hundred films and is one of Britain's most recognisable actors.
Caine is a frequent collaborator with director Christopher Nolan, having appeared in five of the filmmaker's eight films: Batman Begins, The Prestige, The Dark Knight, Inception, and The Dark Knight Rises.
Before handing him The Caine Mutiny, Stanley Kramer hired Dmytryk to direct a few low-budget films.
Numerous films have been made at Twickenham since the end of Hagen's tenure including Carol Reed's The Stars Look Down in 1939, In the 1960s classic films such as Alfie starring Michael Caine, The Italian Job in 1969 with Noël Coward, Roman Polanski's first English language film in 1965 Repulsion ; Be My Guest in 1965, featured Jerry Lee Lewis an early appearance by the young actor Steve Marriott and The Nashville Teens.
The 007 films inspired other spy films like the ' Harry Palmer ' spy mystery trilogy featured a reluctant, bespectacled, unglamorous British secret serviceman ( Michael Caine ) ( from the best-selling novel by Len Deighton ) in The Ipcress File ( 1965 ), Funeral in Berlin ( 1967 ) and Billion Dollar Brain ( 1967 ).
British actors in starring roles in 1960s films included Sir Alec Guinness, Richard Burton, Peter Sellers, Audrey Hepburn, Julie Christie, Michael Caine, Rex Harrison, Julie Andrews and David Niven.
Although this phenomenon is not as common today as it was in the 1970s, Canadian films do still sometimes cast famous foreign actors: Michael Caine starred in the 2003 film The Statement, Helena Bonham Carter played the lead role in 1996's Margaret's Museum and Olivia Newton-John has a starring role in the forthcoming Score: A Hockey Musical.
For a time, Dmytryk moved to England, and Stanley Kramer hired him to direct a trio of low-budget films before handing Dmytryk The Caine Mutiny.
Michael Caine himself has said that it was one of the worst films he had been involved in along with The Swarm and Ashanti, because no one knew what it was all about.
Over the following decade he contributed to various television programmes, and made his first foray into feature films when he wrote The Italian Job, which was released in 1969 and starred Noël Coward and Michael Caine.
Johnson was the embodiment of the " boy-next-door wholesomeness ( that ) made him a popular Hollywood star in the ' 40s and ' 50s ," playing " the red-haired, freckle-faced soldier, sailor or bomber pilot who used to live down the street " in MGM movies during the war years with such films as 30 Seconds over Tokyo, A Guy Named Joe and The Caine Mutiny.
Thanks to the popularity of this theory among fiction writers and for its dramatic nature, Gull shows up as the Ripper in a number of books and films ( including the 1988 TV film Jack the Ripper starring Michael Caine ; and the 2000 graphic novel, compiled from the comic book series that ran from 1991 to 1996, From Hell written by Alan Moore with art by Eddie Campbell, as well as its 2001 subsequent film adaptation ).
He also appeared in a number of feature films including The Lavender Hill Mob ( 1951 ), Hell Drivers ( 1957 ), A Tale of Two Cities ( 1958 ) and Alfie ( 1966 ) starring Michael Caine and Shelley Winters.
The most represented living actor is Michael Caine, starring in seven films.

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