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Rains and began
Rains parted ways with their management / indie label, Sounds and Sights, in early 2011 and began operating as an independent artist.

Rains and career
William Claude Rains ( 10 November 1889 – 30 May 1967 ) was an English stage and film actor whose career spanned 46 years.
Her modeling career included contracts with MAC cosmetics, as well as runway shows for boutiques Heatherette run by Traver Rains and Richie Rich.

Rains and London
Rains was born in Camberwell, London.
Rains served in the First World War in the London Scottish Regiment, with fellow actors Basil Rathbone, Ronald Colman and Herbert Marshall.
In 1916, he enlisted for the remaining duration of World War I, joining the London Scottish Regiment as a private, serving alongside his future successful acting contemporaries Claude Rains, Herbert Marshall and Ronald Colman.
Their Polly with a Past ( 1917 ) was a success in both New York and London, where its cast included Edna Best, Noël Coward, Edith Evans, Claude Rains and C. Aubrey Smith.
Rains was guided by a pamphlet written by a British artilley officer describing the powder works at Waltham Abbey in Essex County near London, and also found someone who had worked there to advise him.

Rains and theatre
Other famous actors who performed at the theatre included Charles Wyndham, William Terriss, J. L. Toole, Rutland Barrington ( who became bankrupt managing the theatre for a time ), Henry Ainley ( who briefly co-managed with Gilbert Miller ), Claude Rains, Charles Hawtrey, and Orson Welles.
He appeared mainly in Yiddish theatre, but was sometimes a character actor in English language plays and films, such as It Always Rains On Sunday ( 1947 ) and more notably Expresso Bongo ( 1959 ).

Rains and success
Gowron makes his final appearances in " When It Rains ..." and " Tacking Into the Wind ", where he assumes direct command of Klingon military forces and launches multiple reckless attacks with minimal success.
When Devlin gets instructions to persuade her to seduce Alex Sebastian ( Claude Rains ), one of her father's friends and a leading member of the group, Devlin tries to convince his superiors that Alicia is not fit for the job, without success.
Dilip Kumar was very choosy, and turned down lead roles in many films which eventually were released to great box office success, including Lawrence of Arabia, Pyaasa, The Rains Came and Sangam.
The group's new single " It Never Rains On Maple Lane " b / w " Private Train " was a mild success in Canada ; the A-side only made it to # 67 on the charts, but after two weeks on the charts the single was flipped over and B-side " Private Train " made it into the top 40, peaking at # 37.
Channel 4's review of the film states: " Lacking any real depth or complexity, the film relies on sterling performances from the cast, with Rains and his victim Caufield superb, and Curtiz's uncharacteristically quirky direction for its success.

Rains and title
The title of the story comes from a randomly selected bedtime poem called " There Will Come Soft Rains ", which is an actual poem by Sara Teasdale published in 1920.
Rains came relatively late to film acting and his first screen test was a failure, but his distinctive voice won him the title role in James Whale's The Invisible Man ( 1933 ) when someone accidentally overheard his screen test being played in the next room.
In 1943, Rains played the title character in Universal's full-colour remake of Phantom of the Opera.
Anderson's long-running 1927 comedy-drama about married life, Saturday's Children, in which Humphrey Bogart made an early appearance, was filmed three times – in 1929 as a part-talkie, in 1935 ( in almost unrecognizable form ) as a B-film Maybe It's Love and once again in 1940 under its original title, starring John Garfield in one of his few romantic comedies, along with Anne Shirley and Claude Rains.
The Rains Came is the title of a novel by Louis Bromfield, published in 1937, as well as the 1939 20th Century Fox film version which followed it.
The ambitious series frequently featured critically acclaimed dramas, including the original television versions of The Miracle Worker ( with Teresa Wright as Annie Sullivan ), and The Helen Morgan Story ( with an Emmy to Polly Bergen for her performance in the title role ), In the Presence of Mine Enemies ( Rod Serling's Warsaw ghetto drama starring Charles Laughton, with Robert Redford in an early role ), and the original television version of Judgment at Nuremberg, featuring Maximilian Schell in the role he would repeat in the 1961 film, but with an otherwise different cast, including Claude Rains in the Spencer Tracy role.
Another title is She Who Opens the Ways of the Stormy Rains, which probably relates to the flash floods in the narrow valley, that occur from storms in the area.
The Clairvoyant ( US title: The Evil Mind ) is a 1934 drama film made in the UK, starring Claude Rains, Fay Wray, and Jane Baxter, directed by Maurice Elvey, and based on the novel of the same name by Ernst Lothar.
King Chulalongkorn then promised him to confer on him a princely rank and title if he remained in the monkhood for three Rains.
" Garbage admitted to referencing both the title of the The Jesus and Mary Chain song " Happy When It Rains " ( 1987 ) and Manson's own Scottish psyche.
Produced by Heavy D, Candy Rains first single was the album's title track.

Rains and role
Shortly before the end of the war (" When It Rains ..."), Gowron comes to Deep Space Nine to honor Martok by inducting him into the Order of Kahless, and then announces that he would be taking control of the Klingon forces from Martok because it was time for him to " take a more active role in the war ".
By this time Loy was highly regarded for her performances in romantic comedies and she was anxious to demonstrate her dramatic ability, and was cast in the lead female role in The Rains Came ( 1939 ) opposite Tyrone Power.
( The role had been intended for Claude Rains, who turned it down.
She appeared as Claude Rains ' sweetheart in The Invisible Man, and as the elderly Rose Dawson Calvert in an Academy Award-nominated role in the film Titanic.
Rains of animals ( as well as rains of blood or blood-like material, and similar anomalies ) play a central role in the epistemological writing of Charles Fort, especially in his first book, The Book of the Damned.
Before that he was filmed in his best-known screen role in Mr. Skeffington ( 1944 ) as Fanny Trellis ' brother Trippy, whose theft to pay off his gambling debts forces her to marry the eponymous lead character played by Claude Rains.
It is a picture of Claude Rains, who played the role in Universal's first Invisible Man film in 1933.

Rains and John
Claude Rains played John in the 1938 colour version alongside Errol Flynn, starting a trend for films to depict John as an " effeminate ... arrogant and cowardly stay-at-home ".
* Claude Rains as Prince John of England
The movie stars the Lane Sisters ( Priscilla Lane, Rosemary Lane, and Lola Lane ), and features Gale Page, Claude Rains, Jeffrey Lynn, John Garfield and Dick Foran.
It was followed by 1939's Daughters Courageous, also directed by Michael Curtiz and co-starring Claude Rains and John Garfield, though it is a story about a different family.
Later, Rains taught at the institution, teaching John Gielgud and Laurence Olivier, among others.
In 1874, Reverend Elijah Buttram opened a school at Buttram ’ s Chapel outside town, with Professor John Rains Roberts as principal.
Among other lot owners in the original town, up to 1869, were Eli Self, J. F. Smith, K. G. McLemore, Wiley Weeks, G. C. DeBerry, James Garner, Joe Hobbs, William Cook, G. G. Garner, B. Campbell, Littleton Cook, George Densmore, Louis Levison, Louis Vanshoebrook, John Waterhouse, G. W. Gibson, Isaac Rains, G. E. Jackson, J.
Margheriti worked with many well-known genre actors such as Lee Van Cleef, John Saxon, Claude Rains, John Morghen, Klaus Kinski, Barbara Steele, Reb Brown, Donald Pleasence, Yul Brynner, David Warbeck, Luciano Pigozzi, Marvin Hagler, Lee Majors, James Franciscus, Terence Hill, Fred Williamson, Christopher Lee and many others.
In celebration of Vaughan's thirtieth birthday, the show featured many special guests including the Roomful of Blues horn section, keyboardist Dr. John, Jimmie Vaughan, vocalist Angela Strehli, and drummer George Rains.
Rennie appeared as adventurer Lord John Roxton in director Irwin Allen's 1960 adaptation of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's The Lost World, a tale of a jungle expedition that finds prehistoric monsters in South America ; the film also starred Claude Rains, David Hedison, Fernando Lamas, Jill St. John and Richard Haydn.
Actors appearing in the most episodes include Patricia Hitchcock ( Alfred Hitchcock's daughter ), Dick York, Robert Horton, James Gleason, John Williams, Robert H. Harris, Russell Collins, Claude Rains, Barbara Baxley, Ray Teal, Percy Helton, Phyllis Thaxter, Carmen Mathews, Mildred Dunnock and Alan Napier.
Rancho Cucamonga was sold in 1858 to John Rains.
John Rains was murdered on November 17, 1862.
* Casa de Rancho Cucamonga ( John Rains House ) ( California Historical Landmark # 360.
After learning of the death of his brother, Larry Talbot ( Lon Chaney, Jr .) returns to his ancestral home in Llanwelly, Wales to reconcile with his estranged father, Sir John Talbot ( Claude Rains ).
* Claude Rains as Sir John Talbot
* 2001-Champion ( policy ): The State University of West Georgia ( Rashad Evans and Sarah Holbrook ) Runner-up: Emory University ( John Rains and Kacey Wolmer ).
The film It Always Rains on Sunday ( 1947 ) is a precursor of the genre, and the John Osborne play Look Back in Anger ( 1956 ) is thought of as the first of the idiom.
The movie also stars John Garfield and Claude Rains.
He even tried his hand at TV sitcom, playing the dour owner of a run-down seaside waxworks museum in the Thames-tv series Hope It Rains, written by John Esmonde and Bob Larbey and directed by John Howard Davies.

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