A. Storms is off the uncover for a couple of months due to undisclosed medical problems, even though on the E! reality array “Dirty Soap,” she mentioned she suffers from endometriosis. She’s scheduled to lapse to the ABC soap early next year.
Q. we admire “Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer” and watch it every year, but we have always been bewildered by the doll on the Island of Misfit Toys. What is her problem? She looks normal compared to the other toys.
A. All we know is that the initial time we saw “Rudolph” in 1964, we longed for a GE electric toothbrush more than anything in the world. (GE sponsored the show.)
But sufficient about me. Let’s speak about “A Dolly for Sue,” as she is known. Since she has no aspect problems, there has long been conjecture about her dolly issues. The subject has at last been staid by writer Arthur Rankin Jr., who mentioned that Dolly’s complaint was mental since her owners had deserted her and she was depressed. (This was in the days before Paxil for Playthings had been invented.)
Q. When Harry Morgan died, we remembered a array he was on in the 1970s. It was set in the Old West and he played the sidekick. This was before “M*A*S*H.” Any ideas?
A. That sounds similar to “Hec Ramsey,” that was a rotating segment of the “NBC Mystery Movie” from 1972 to 1974. Ramsey was a lawman who used systematic methods – or at least as systematic as they could be – in the Old West of 1900. Richard Boone played Hec and Morgan played the locale doctor, Amos Coogan. The uncover was constructed by Jack Webb, whom Morgan played conflicting in the 1960s chronicle of “Dragnet.”
Q. Did Abbott and Costello movie a movie with Ma and Pa Kettle?
A. No, but they did movie a movie with Marjorie Main, who played Ma Kettle in a array of drive-in theatre during the 1940s and 1950s. The movie is 1947’s “The Wistful Widow of Wagon Gap,” and whilst Main’s disposition isn’t declared Ma Kettle, she’s flattering similar. Costello ends up being the guardian of Main and her fruit of kids when he’s secretly indicted of murdering her husband. Abbott is around to offer his normal encouragement in the form of adage “shut up” a lot.
Q. I’m perplexing to find a movie from the 1960s. The principal thing we recollect about it is a stage where the favourite fights 7 skeletons with swords in their hands. we considered the name of the movie was “The Magnificent Seven,” but that movie has Yul Brynner in it and is not the same movie.
A. What you recollect is the 1963 movie “Jason and the Argonauts,” that stars Todd Armstrong and Nancy Kovack and features special belongings by the great Ray Harryhausen.
This is not to be befuddled with other Harryhausen film, “The 7th Voyage of Sinbad,” that has a free-for-all between the favourite and only a lousy skeleton. “Jason and the Argonauts” is on DVD.
Q. Does Faith Ford have a hermit declared Danny? Is her grandfather the important stuntman declared Canutt?
A. Faith Ford, who appeared on the sitcoms “Murphy Brown” and “Hope and Faith,” has a sister, Devon O’Day, but no brother. She is not connected to mythological stuntman Yakima Canutt.
Q. The strain on the stream iPod Touch blurb is upbeat and the lyrics add the line, “Take me to your most appropriate friend’s house.” Title and performer, please?
A. The strain is “Tongue Tied” by Grouplove.
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