Topic: Deborah Kerr
The famous movie “An Affair to Remember,” which starred Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr, presents different scenes in a cruise ship where men and women...
Picture Director Lead actress (Deborah Kerr) Lead actor (Yul Brynner)* Cinematography (colour) Art direction-set direction (colour)* Sound* Costume design* Score*
Deborah Kerr was a Scottish cancer , just three weeks after the death of his wife.Kerr made her film debut in 1940 with Contraband. Kerr's more recent works include Witness for the Prosecution , A Woman of Substance , The Assam Garden , Reunion ...
A good kiss requires technique, enthusiasm and breath control. When Han Solo and Princess Cinnibun-Head kiss while the Millennium Falcon is hiding out in an asteroid field, it is the finest moment in Star Wars history. Han Solo is a rogue, and ...
Ah, get the hankies at the ready for another good old fashioned weepy. Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr star as the love struck pair aboard a ocean cruiser heading back to USA to meet their respective fiancs. Grant and Kerr are wonderful ...
Victor (Grant), the Earl of Ryall fears his marriage to his wife Hillary (Kerr) is going stale. Cary Grant and director Stanley Donen collaborated on four films together which they made through the Grandon production company they co-owned. Grant and leading lady ...
Before there were pointless slasher films and ridiculous film franchises, horror movies were actually scary. ) Directed by Robert Wise (who, incidentally, also directed ?The Sound of Music?), this black-and-white film with creatively creepy camera angles is the scariest movie I?ve ever ...
Fred Zinnemann's 1953 classic, which won eight Oscars, is chiefly remembered for the iconic scene of Deborah Kerr and Burt Lancaster rolling about together in the Hawaiian surf.
Q Whatever happened to John Kerr, who played Lt. Cable in the movie South Pacific? A guest on numerous TV shows from the 1950s through the 1970s, Kerr was a cast member or semiregular on Arrest and Trial, Peyton Place, The F ...
Novelists spend years developing their craft, editing and reediting their work, agonizing over the smallest word, often to be rejected by publisher...