Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Colorado Rockies" ¶ 22
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Neagle and went
The Rockies went 73 89 in both years that Hampton and Neagle were in Colorado, and the amount of money owed them ( the Rockies paid a sizable portion of Hampton's salary even after he was traded to the Atlanta Braves ) crippled the team for the next several years.
Hartnell became popular with younger stars of stage and screen, and went on to dress such names as Gladys Cooper and Elsie Randolph, later gaining as clients Gertrude Lawrence ( also a client of Edward Molyneux ), Jessie Matthews, Merle Oberon, Evelyn Laye, Anna Neagle and even Alice Delysia and Mistinguett, two French stars impressed by the young Englishman's genius.
On April 4, 2001, Rentería went three-for-five and hit a 432 foot home run off of Denny Neagle in a 13 9 loss to Colorado at Coors Field.

Neagle and
Their pitching staff had the perennial big-3 of Greg Maddux ( 18 9, 2. 22 ERA ), Tom Glavine ( 20 6, 2. 47 ERA ), and John Smoltz ( 17 3, 2. 90 ERA ), as well as Kevin Millwood ( 17 8, 4. 08 ERA ) and Denny Neagle ( 16 11, 3. 55 ERA ).
* June 3 Anna Neagle, English actress ( b. 1904 )
Dame Anna Neagle, DBE ( 20 October 1904 3 June 1986 ), born Florence Marjorie Robertson, was a popular British stage and film actress and singer.
In 1937 Neagle gave her most prestigious performance so far as Queen Victoria in the successful historical drama Victoria the Great ( 1937 ), co-starring Anton Walbrook as Prince Albert.
Two years after Charlie Girl which she also performed in Australia and New Zealand Neagle was asked to appear in a revival of No, No, Nanette, which she had done onscreen three decades earlier.
Jeff Blauser followed with a bunt single to score Lopez, and after Neagle bunted to advance Jones and Blauser Marquis Grissom doubled them in to give Atlanta an early 4 0 lead.
Up until that time celebrities such as Prince George the Duke of Kent, George Formby, Jacob Malik Soviet Ambassador, John H Whiting U. S Ambassador, Valerie Hobson and Dame Anna Neagle had all turned on Blackpool's Illuminations.

Neagle and three
Neagle also produced, but did not appear in, three films starring Frankie Vaughan: These Dangerous Years ( 1957 ), Wonderful Things ( 1957 ), and The Heart of a Man ( 1959 ).
After Charlie Hayes drove in Fielder, Neagle was pulled in favor of reliever Terrell Wade, who walked Darryl Strawberry and was promptly pulled in favor of Mike Bielecki, who struck out the next three batters and then retired the Yankees in the seventh.

Neagle and years
Two years earlier, Hampton had won 22 games and finished second in voting for the Cy Young Award as a member of the Houston Astros, while Neagle had been a 20-game winner in 1997 for the Atlanta Braves and had won fifteen games in 2000.
Neagle proved to be a box-office sensation in British films for over 25 years.
Despite the fact that Neagle was some 8 years senior to Wilding, they proved to be an extremely bankable romantic pairing at the British box office.
As directed by Cyril Frankel, this was the first film for over 20 years where Neagle was directed by someone other than Herbert Wilcox.
Although plagued by Parkinson's disease in her later years, Neagle continued to be active.
The Braves tied it in sixth on a Ryan Klesko RBI single, but San Diego retook the lead in the bottom of the inning when Jim Leyritz, two years removed from his crucial home run against the Braves in the 1996 World Series, hit a solo shot off Denny Neagle.

Neagle and with
The first film director in was Herbert Wilcox, completing London Melody with Anna Neagle, portions of which had already been filmed at Elstree Studios before a fire there halted production.
Forming a professional alliance with Wilcox, Neagle played her first starring film role in the musical Goodnight Vienna ( 1932 ), again with Jack Buchanan.
Neagle had her first major success with Nell Gwyn ( 1934 ), which Wilcox had also shot in 1926 as a silent starring Dorothy Gish.
Neagle and Wilcox followed with a circus trapeze fable The Three Maxims ( 1937 ), which was released in the United States as The Show Goes On.
The film, with a script featuring a contribution from Herman J. Mankiewicz ( who later co-wrote Citizen Kane with Orson Welles ), had Neagle performing her own high-wire acrobatics.
While the first of these films was in release, Neagle returned to the London stage and entertained audiences with her portrayal of the title role in Peter Pan.
Neagle and Wilcox began an association with RKO Radio Pictures.
Neagle co-starred with Ray Bolger ( right ) in Sunny ( 1941 film ) | Sunny ( 1941 ), one of a handful of films that she made in the United States.
Returning to Britain, Neagle and Wilcox commenced with They Flew Alone ( 1942 ; shot after but released before Forever and a Day ).
Neagle with Richard Greene for the World War II | war-time espionage thriller The Yellow Canary ( 1943 ).
Neagle appeared with Errol Flynn in Lilacs in the Spring ( 1954 ), the film adaptation of her stage success The Glorious Days.
Although Neagle performed several musical numbers for the film, most of them were cut from the final release, leaving her with essentially a supporting role.
Set in a children's hospital, the film features Neagle as a matron dealing with the problems of the patients and the staff, notably a nurse ( Syms ) infatuated with one of the doctors ( George Baker ).
With her husband, Neagle began producing films starring Frankie Vaughan, but these were out of touch with changing tastes, and lost money, resulting in Wilcox going heavily into debt.
This production transferred to London in 1973, with a cast starring Anna Neagle, Anne Rogers and Tony Britton.
The operetta was filmed twice, in 1933 in black-and-white ( in Britain, with Anna Neagle and Fernand Gravet in the leading roles ) and in 1940 in Technicolor by MGM, starring Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy.
Lamar Neagle was named the USL-2 league MVP and lead the league in scoring with 13 league goals.
In 1996 he started in the season in the Braves rotation but also spent time in Richmond and on the disabled list before he was traded to the Pittsburgh Pirates ( with Ron Wright ) for Denny Neagle on August 30, 1996.
This same show was made into a film in 1926, then remade in 1940 with Anna Neagle and Ray Milland, and again for the stage in 1973 with Debbie Reynolds.

Neagle and Rockies
With Hampton out of town and Neagle injured much of the year, Jennings became the centerpiece of the Rockies ' pitching staff in 2003.

Neagle and ;
He played piano in the West End of London working his way up to being the Music Director for shows such as My Fair Lady with Dame Anna Neagle and Tony Britton directed by the lyricist of the show Alan Jay Lerner ; Oliver!

Neagle and was
* In 1942, a film of Johnson's life, They Flew Alone, was made by director-producer Herbert Wilcox, starring Anna Neagle as Johnson, and Robert Newton as Mollison.
In her historical dramas, Anna Neagle was renowned for her portrayals of real-life British heroines, including Nell Gwynn ( Nell Gwynn, 1934 ), Queen Victoria ( Victoria the Great, 1937, and Sixty Glorious Years, 1938 ) and Edith Cavell ( Nurse Edith Cavell, 1939 ).
Neagle was born in Forest Gate, Essex, daughter to Herbert Robertson, a Merchant Navy captain, and his wife, the former Florence Neagle.
Victoria the Great was such an international success that it resulted in Neagle and Walbrook essaying their roles again in an all-Technicolor sequel entitled Sixty Glorious Years ( 1938 ), co-starring C. Aubrey Smith as the Duke of Wellington.
In this, still another Neagle performance of a true-life British heroine, she essayed the role of the nurse who was shot by the Germans in World War I for alleged spying.
Neagle and Wilcox's final American film was Forever and a Day ( 1943 ), a tale of a London family house from 1804 to the 1940 blitz.
The third pairing of Neagle and Wilding in the " London films ", as the series of films came to be called, was in Spring in Park Lane ( 1948 ).
By 1950, Neagle was at her zenith as Britain ’ s top box-office actress, and in that year she made what reputedly became her own favourite film, Odette, co-starring Trevor Howard, Peter Ustinov and Marius Goring.
In England, where Neagle had top billing, the film was reasonably successful.
( Some sources state that Neagle was suffering from cancer at the time of her death ).
Neagle was created a Commander of the Order of the British Empire ( CBE ) in 1952 and, for her contributions to the theatre, a Dame of the Order of the British Empire ( DBE ) in 1969.
In 1932 it was adapted as a film starring Anna Neagle.

0.254 seconds.