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Stanley and Holloway
* Albert Ramsbottom, subject of a number of humorous monologues by Stanley Holloway
They usually included a degree of social comment, and featured ensemble casts which often included Alec Guinness or Stanley Holloway.
Regular attendees at his famed soirées included Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy, Joan Crawford and Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart, Claudette Colbert, Marlene Dietrich, Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh, actor Richard Cromwell, Stanley Holloway, Judy Garland, Gene Tierney, Noël Coward, Cole Porter, director James Whale, costume designer Edith Head, and Norma Shearer, especially after the death of her first husband, Irving Thalberg.
His first major comedy role was in The Lavender Hill Mob ( 1951 ): with Alfie Bass he made up the bullion robbery gang headed by Alec Guinness and Stanley Holloway.
Stanley Holloway, who recorded it in 1956, attributed it to R. P. Weston, a songwriter active from 1906 to 1934.
** Stanley Holloway, English actor ( b. 1890 )
The film stars Celia Johnson, Trevor Howard, Stanley Holloway and Joyce Carey.
* Stanley Holloway as Albert Godby
There are several studio cast recordings of the show including one with Stanley Holloway and Alma Cogan and another with Josephine Barstow and Julian Forsyth.
"; Stanley Holloway performing " With a Little Bit of Luck ; John Michael King singing " On the Street Where You Live "
Clarke, directed by Charles Crichton, starring Alec Guinness and Stanley Holloway and featuring Sid James and Alfie Bass.
One evening a new lodger — artist Alfred Pendlebury ( Stanley Holloway ) — arrives at the boarding house where Holland lives in Lavender Hill.
* Stanley Holloway as Alfred " Al " Pendlebury
Stanley Holloway in 1974
Stanley Augustus Holloway, OBE ( 1 October 1890 – 30 January 1982 ) was an English stage and film actor, comedian, singer, poet and monologist.
He began performing part-time as Master Stanley Holloway – The Wonderful Boy Soprano from 1904, singing sentimental songs such as " The Lost Chord ".
In The Manchester Guardian, Alistair Cooke wrote, " Stanley Holloway distils into the body of Doolittle the taste and smell of every pub in England.
Julian had a brief relationship with Patricia Neal's daughter Tessa Dahl ( Stanley Holloway had appeared with Neal in the 1965 film In Harm's Way ), which produced a daughter, the model and author Sophie Dahl.
There is a building named after him at 2 Coolfin Road, Newham, London, called Stanley Holloway Court.
He oversaw the publication of three volumes of the monologues by or associated with him: Monologues ( 1979 ); The Stanley Holloway Monologues ( 1980 ); and More Monologues ( 1981 ).
* Stanley Holloway pictures on Getty images
* Stanley Holloway monologue lyrics
* Stanley Holloway – The Co optimists video
* Stanley Holloway on British Pathe news
cs: Stanley Holloway

Stanley and played
In the experimental post 1960s eras, which saw the development of free jazz and jazz-rock fusion, some of the influential bassists included Charles Mingus ( 1922 – 1979 ), who was also a composer and bandleader whose music fused hard bop with black gospel music, free jazz and classical music ; free jazz and post-bop bassist Charlie Haden ( born 1937 ) is best known for his long association with saxophonist Ornette Coleman and for his role in the 1970s-era Liberation Music Orchestra, an experimental group ; Eddie Gomez and George Mraz, who played with Bill Evans and Oscar Peterson, respectively, and are both acknowledged to have furthered expectations of pizzicato fluency and melodic phrasing, fusion virtuoso Stanley Clarke ( born 1951 ) is notable for his dexterity on both the upright bass and the electric bass, and Terry Plumeri, noted for his horn-like arco fluency and vocal tone.
He then played a rogue lorry driver Johnny Yates in Cy Endfield's Hell Drivers ( 1957 ) alongside Stanley Baker, Herbert Lom, Peggy Cummins and Patrick McGoohan.
* Stanley ' Stinky ' Womack ( played by Pruitt Taylor Vince ) — The hardworking and humble proprietor / bartender of a local bar that he recently purchased and renovated.
He played Stanley Kowalski in Tennessee Williams ' Un tram che si chiama desiderio ( A Streetcar Named Desire ), as well as in As You Like It ( by Shakespeare ) and Oreste ( by Vittorio Alfieri ).
Much of the series was shot on location, with Stanley played by Keith Buckley.
Another regular character, who had also first appeared in Beyond Our Ken, and who appeared in the script as " Dentures ", was Stanley Birkenshaw, played by Paddick and characterised as a man with ill-fitting false teeth who was utterly incapable of pronouncing the letter S without spraying saliva all over the set.
* Dr. Strangelove, Stanley Kubrick's satire about nuclear war between the US and Russia featuring a former Nazi ( played by Peter Sellers ) as an adviser to the Americans.
At a meeting in the town library in October 1968 the revival was initiated by Stanley Wotherington, and in August 1970 the new club played at a new ground, the Crown Ground.
Stanley Kubrick cast Pickens after Peter Sellers, who played three other roles in the film, sprained his ankle and was unable to perform in the role due to having to work in the cramped cockpit set.
Under the new proposal, the Stanley Cup Final series alternated between the East and the West each year, with alternating games played according to NHA and PCHA rules .< ref name =" DiamondPrize-20 ">< nowiki > Diamond, Zweig, and Duplacey </ nowiki >, p. 20 </ ref > The Cup trustees agreed to this new arrangement, because after the Allan Cup became the highest prize for amateur hockey teams in Canada, the trustees had become dependent on the top two professional leagues to bolster the prominence of the trophy.
Curtis ' comedies include Some Like It Hot ( 1959 ), Sex and the Single Girl ( 1964 ) and The Great Race ( 1965 ), and his dramas included playing the slave Antoninus in Stanley Kubrick's Spartacus ( 1960 ) co-starring Kirk Douglas and Laurence Olivier, The Outsider ( 1961 ), the true story of WW II veteran Ira Hayes, and The Boston Strangler ( 1968 ), in which he played the self-confessed murderer of the film's title, Albert DeSalvo.
During those seven seasons the two teams played five postseason series against each other in the Stanley Cup playoffs, with the Avalanche winning three of the series and the Red Wings winning two of them.
Dennis Scott played only 18 games, Nick Anderson missed 22 games, Stanley Roberts, Jerry Reynolds, Brian Williams, Sam Vincent and Otis Smith all missed at least 27 games each.
Terry Crisp, who played for the Philadelphia Flyers when they won two Stanley Cups in the mid-1970s, and coached the Calgary Flames to a Cup in 1989, was tapped as the first head coach.
The Blackhawks played the then Stanley Cup champions, the Detroit Red Wings, for the Western Conference Championship.
No games were played and the Stanley Cup was not awarded for the first time since the flu epidemic of 1919.
The Final will be remembered for game one which still stands as the longest Stanley Cup Final game played in the modern NHL.
The Millionaires played for the Stanley Cup five times, winning over the Ottawa Senators in 1915 on home ice.
Their elimination from the 1995 Stanley Cup playoffs in Game 4 of the second round marked the Canucks ' last game played at the Pacific Coliseum, as the team moved into the General Motors Place ( since renamed Rogers Arena ), a new $ 160 million arena situated in Downtown Vancouver, the following season.
Richard won the Stanley Cup eight times in Montreal, was captain for four of the five straight cup wins from 1955-56 to 1959-60, won the Hart Trophy in 1947, was elected eight times to the first all-star team and six times to the second all-star team, and played in every National Hockey League All-Star Game from 1947 to 1959.
After the despatch of Richard, who had gone into battle crowned, Polydore Vergil records that the fallen coronet was retrieved and placed by Lord Stanley on his stepson ’ s head before his cheering troops, thereby emphasing the critical role the Stanleys had played in bringing Henry Tudor to the throne.
In 1959 Sykes wrote and directed the one-off BBC special Gala Opening, with a cast that included ' Professor ' Stanley Unwin and Hattie Jacques, and played a small supporting role in the Tommy Steele film Tommy the Toreador.
Raymond Massey played Richelieu in Under the Red Robe ( 1937 ), based on Stanley J. Weyman's swashbuckling novel of the same title.
* In the 1970s BBC TV comedy series Porridge, the principal character, Norman Stanley Fletcher, played by Ronnie Barker, hailed from Muswell Hill.
Hull ended his career having played in 1063 NHL games, accumulating 610 goals, 560 assists, 1170 points, 640 penalty minutes, three Art Ross Trophies, two Hart Memorial Trophies, a Lady Byng Memorial Trophy, a Stanley Cup Championship and adding 102 penalty minutes, 62 goals and 67 assists for 129 points in 119 playoff games.

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