Word: harrold
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...apartment in Elvis memorabilia and drives a white Caddy bearing the legend THE KING LIVES. A shabby-genteel Brit (David Bowie) eases his gun into Ed's mouth--in front of Tiffany--and purrs, "I like you, Ed." A rancid TV producer (Paul Mazursky) asks his girlfriend (Kathryn Harrold) to play kinky games with him: "Oblige me. I'm gonna put this on video...
MacGruder & Loud, a new ABC show from Producer Aaron Spelling's factory, is equally lighthearted. The heroes are a pair of police officers (John Getz and Kathryn Harrold) who are secretly married but continue to share a patrol car against department rules. Their deception gets fairly elaborate: they live in neighboring apartments, for example, that are connected by a hidden door in the bookcase. MacGruder & Loud goes through the cop-show motions, but the off-duty mush is clearly where its heart is set. You can't keep a good genre down. Reports of the sitcom's death, it turns...
...thought of it before. Search though one may through the annals of romance it is impossible to find a love to equal that of an opera singer for his throat specialist. And if you have him played by Supertenor Luciano Pavarotti and have her (Kathryn Harrold) played as a capable, no-nonsense sort of woman, uninterested in opera and unimpressed by its big-kid egos, then you have, at least, a package you can get produced, if not exactly a movie the whole world is waiting for. True to the packager's creed, Yes, Giorgio has something for everyone...
Richard Nixon harbored some of Johnson's political sentiments about the purposes and authority of the court. The Senate rejection of his nominees, Clement Haynsworth and G. Harrold Carswell, is now history. Nixon was in utter despair when he learned that his own appointee, Chief Justice Warren Burger, had ruled that Nixon had to surrender the White House tapes. That was a pivotal drama in the Watergate scandal. Things were changing...
These values were tested by the Civil Rights movement and particularly by the Vietnam War. Marlette went to Florida State University, a hotbed of political activism during the Sixties; he marched in the moratoriums, marched on G. Harrold Carswell's house, and in between drew cartoons for the FSU Flambeau, the university daily. Somehow, he kept his innocence, and the wonderful sense of possiblity and hope that characterized the Sixties breathes through his cartoons. They are not cynical. Even at their most satirical, there is a sense of alternative life, an implication that things don't have to be this...