Word: millers
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...music has been written by Alan J. Lerner '40, Stanley A. Miller '38, and Benjamin Welles, II '38. J. David Lannon, Jr. '39 has written the lyrics for the show...
Arnold Gottlieb, of Brooklyn, New York; James B. McMillen, of McDonald, North Carolina; William T. Miller, of Portsmouth, Ohio; Michael E. Mooney, of Dorchester; Lamar N. Ostrander, of Olympia, Washington; Paul Roberts, of New York; Herbert Robinson, of New York; Selig J. Seligman, of New York; land Daniel F. Sullivan, of Newport; Rhode Island...
...Womack, deaf and 60, sat aloof, his hand cupped to his ear, as indignant insurance adjusters and store managers recognized not only Bertha Mae but his three daughters. Mrs. Mildred Felis, Mrs. Anna Ehrman, Mrs. Blanche Miller, their three husbands, and a family friend named Miss Margaret Robertson. Apparently sturdy, the Womacks had for several years proved more susceptible to injury than any family in the U. S. The slightest jolt of a bus or taxicab was enough to send a Womack sprawling. In elevators and department stores in Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Tennessee, the Womacks repeatedly stumbled over...
...lively Womacks thoroughly enjoyed themselves in court. During recesses the women changed coats and hats in the rest-room and then changed husbands to confuse witnesses. Barrel-chested Son-in-Law Miller and youthful Son-in-Law Felis, both professional wrestlers, took a night off during the trial to wrestle in nearby Hannibal, Mo. where Miller earned $20. But when the troupe realized that the 13 counts on which each was held, carried aggregate maximum jail sentences of 65 years and $75,000 in fines, they giggled less. Son-in-Law Miller offered to wrestle Assistant U. S. District Attorney...
...Herbert Wilcox) is the trade name of a light-footed, light-fingered, essentially noble Paris Apache with a Viennese accent (Anton Walbrook), whose associations with 1) a maiden pure of heart (Renee Ray), 2) a fancy lady (Ruth Chatterton), and 3) a predatory stuffed shirt (Hugh Miller) leave Montmartre's half-world a better place to live in. The Rat was originally (1924) a pot-boiled play by England's Constance Collier and Ivor (Keep the Home Fires Burning) Novello. On the screen it is still the same lukewarm dish...