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Page "Howard Hawks" ¶ 5
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Hawks and stated
Hawks later stated that the film " had a great fault and I learned an awful lot from that.
Again, Oh denied any involvement and Hawks batting coach Yoshiharu Wakana stated that the pitchers acted on his orders, saying, " I just didn't want a foreign player to break Oh's record.
Oh denied any involvement and Hawks battery coach Yoshiharu Wakana stated that the pitchers acted on his orders, saying, " It would be distasteful to see a foreign player break Oh's record.
Author Chuck Hawks stated:
Hawks stated in interviews that he had originally planned to star both Clark Gable and Wayne in the film until Gable's death finally ruled that out.
The Hawks stated that they intended to bring Germano back after the offseason started, However, he turned it down, stating he wanted to return to pitch in the States.

Hawks and personally
The World War I film was based on a short story by author William Faulkner, who Hawks got to know personally during the shooting of the film and remained friends with for over twenty years.

Hawks and directed
He was next employed as a prop boy and general assistant on an unspecified film directed by Cecil B. DeMille ( Hawks never named the film in later interviews and DeMille made five films roughly in that time period ).
Hawks next worked on the Mary Pickford film The Little Princess, directed by Marshall Neilan.
Over the next three years, Hawks directed his first eight films ( six silent, two " talkies ").
Hawks reworked the scripts of most of the films he directed without always taking official credit for his work.
In 1941 Hawks began work on the Howard Hughes produced ( and later directed ) film The Outlaw, based on the life of Billy the Kid and starring Jane Russell.
Wood named the Hawks directed Rio Bravo as his top film of all time.
Hudson finally relented, so long as the Hawks each paid him $ 10 per week to be their instructor ; all music theory questions were directed to Hudson.
", The Big Sleep directed by Howard Hawks ( 1946 ), The Lady Eve directed by Preston Sturges ( 1941 ), The Shop Around the Corner directed by Ernst Lubitsch ( 1940 ), White Heat directed by Raoul Walsh ( 1949 ), Yankee Doodle Dandy directed by Michael Curtiz ( 1942 ), and Notorious directed by Alfred Hitchcock, ( 1946 ).
Huston writes that Sergeant York, which was directed by Howard Hawks, has " gone down as one of Howard's best pictures, and Gary Cooper had a triumph playing the young mountaineer.
* His Girl Friday ( 1940 ) directed by Howard Hawks considered the best of the adaptations, starring Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell.
She starred in Storm Warning ( 1950 ) with Ronald Reagan and Doris Day, the noir, anti Ku Klux Klan film by Warner Brothers, and in Monkey Business ( 1952 ) with Cary Grant and Marilyn Monroe, directed by Howard Hawks.
Bringing Up Baby ( 1938 ) is an American screwball comedy film directed by Howard Hawks, starring Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant, and released by RKO Radio Pictures.
Due to the film's perceived failure, Hawks was released early from his two-film contract with RKO and Gunga Din was eventually directed by George Stevens.
Category: Films directed by Howard Hawks
His Girl Friday is a 1940 American screwball comedy film directed by Howard Hawks, an adaptation by Charles Lederer, Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur of the play The Front Page by Hecht and MacArthur.
At first, Hawks wanted Carole Lombard, whom he had directed in the screwball comedy Twentieth Century, but the cost of hiring Lombard in her new status as a freelancer proved to be far too expensive, and Columbia could not afford her.
Category: Films directed by Howard Hawks
Red River is a 1948 Western film directed by Howard Hawks, giving a fictional account of the first cattle drive from Texas to Kansas along the Chisholm Trail.
Category: Films directed by Howard Hawks

Hawks and three
In March 1927 Hawks signed a new one-year, three picture contract with Fox and was assigned to direct Frazil, based on the play L ' Insoumise by Pierre Frondaie.
On January 2, Kenneth Hawks and his crew flew three planes ( two with cameras, one with a stunt actor ) over Santa Monica Bay when the two camera planes crashed into each other, killing ten men.
Hawks was married three times:
Since 1980, the Hawks have drafted a grand total of three players who have ever been chosen to play in an All-Star game ( Doc Rivers, Kevin Willis, and Al Horford ; Dominique Wilkins was actually selected by the Utah Jazz and traded to the Hawks a few months after the draft ).
The Hawks won all three games at Philips Arena, which hosted its first playoff games and earned its first sellout.
However, the Hawks would be eliminated in the first round by the Boston Celtics in six games, ending the Hawks ' three year streak of advancing to the second round.
In the late 1950s, the Hawks struck gold, picking up three young prospects ( forwards Bobby Hull and Stan Mikita and defenseman Pierre Pilote ), as well as obtaining both star goaltender Glenn Hall and veteran forward Ted Lindsay ( who had just had a career season with 30 goals and 55 assists ) from Detroit.
Tallon played three seasons with the club before being traded away to the Chicago Black Hawks.
" Hawks went on to work with RKO on three films in the next decade.
Because the film starred a crooner, Martin, and a teen idol, Nelson, Hawks included three songs in the soundtrack.
Oh led the Hawks to three Pacific League pennants in 1999, 2000 and 2003, and two Japan Series titles in 1999 and 2003.
was set at the South Pole and has been made into a film three times: by Howard Hawks in 1951 ( dialogue indicates the setting in this version is near the North Pole ), by John Carpenter in 1982, and by Matthijs van Heijningen Jr. in 2011.
1931 and 1932 saw the genre produce three classics: Warner Bros .' Little Caesar and The Public Enemy, which made screen icons out of Edward G. Robinson and James Cagney, and Howard Hawks ' Scarface starring Paul Muni, which offered a dark psychological analysis of a fictionalized Al Capone.
Caray did play-by-play for the St. Louis Hawks professional basketball team ( now the Atlanta Hawks ) and the University of Missouri football team, and he announced three Cotton Bowl games.
In March 1979, Fletcher completed an eight player trade that sent franchise-leading scorer Tom Lysiak and four players to the Chicago Black Hawks for three players led by defenseman Phil Russell.
In the playoffs, they beat the Rangers in three games, but went on to lose against the Chicago Black Hawks in three.
His playing career spanned from the 1938 – 39 season until the 1953 – 54 season, playing for both the Detroit Red Wings and Chicago Black Hawks and was a member of three winning Stanley Cups in 1943, 1950, and 1952 with the Detroit Red Wings.
For the first year, the All-Stars were a team composed of the First and Second NHL All-Star Teams ( not to be confused with the All-Stars that played against the Cup champions ), as well as three players from the New York Rangers and one player each from the Detroit Red Wings and the Chicago Black Hawks.
Iowa earned the trip to Pasadena, since the Hawks had beaten all three teams during the regular season, and all of them on the road.

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