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Word: harlows (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...Harlow also shines with Hollywood polish. It's colorful, snappy, everyone looks larger than life. Even the music isn't too bad. But no one, not the director, the writer, or the producer, seems to have considered what the film was supposed to do, what point of view it should take. So they've produced the same stereotyped, meaningless trash they were trying so hard to avoid...

Author: By Gregory P. Pressman, | Title: Harlow | 7/15/1965 | See Source »

...Jean Harlow's life was what was killed, actually cut to ribbons, in this version. You would never know that Harlow covers six years, if her agent had not loudly said that Harlow was a minor at the beginning of her career and died at 26. You'd never guess that her first marriage, to an important man, lasted almost a year, for in the film it goes for less than a day. And you never learn of her second marriage, of her deep remorse at being a barren woman, and of her bitter feud with her studio...

Author: By Gregory P. Pressman, | Title: Harlow | 7/15/1965 | See Source »

...Yorkers is the whole gently mountainous area of Southern Vermont and New Hampshire. Typical is the so-called Monadnock Region, with its cluster of unchanged and unchanging New England towns ?Peterboro, Dublin, Hancock, Jaffrey. Those with homes in the area include Chicago Newspaper Scion Marshall Field III, Harlow Shapley, famed Harvard astronomer, Edwin Land, inventor of the Polaroid camera...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Recreation: Splendors at Home | 7/2/1965 | See Source »

...became the first member of the Class of 1940 to make the first string. Harvard beat Princeton, 34-6, and then dealt Yale its first defeat of the season. The victory over Princeton was the first since 1923 and the first major-game win for Harvard under Coach Dick Harlow...

Author: By Hendrik Hertzberg, | Title: Mood of '40 Changed in 4 Years; Class Left Under Shadow of War | 6/14/1965 | See Source »

...cast can hardly be blamed for failing to get a fix on their parts. Sargent employed the rapid-fire, four-camera, damn-the-retakes shooting technique of television. However ragged the result on the big screen, this method enabled him to bring in his Harlow for one-seventh the cost ($600,000) of a rival Harlow being produced simultaneously by Joseph Levine. More important, he finished it in one-seventh the time (eight days), so that Electrono-vision could steal the plunder from Levine, who will not have his Carroll Baker Harlow ready for premiere until the end of June...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: No Time for Sargent's | 5/28/1965 | See Source »

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