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#Robert Horton
lobbycards · 2 hours
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The Green Slime, Italian lobby card (Fotobusta), Italian theatrical release 1969
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kwebtv · 13 days
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From the Golden Age of Television
Around the Horn to Matrimony - ABC - May 23, 1955
A presentation of "TV Reader's Digest" Season 1 Episode 19
Drama
Running Time: 30 minutes
Stars:
Robert Hutton as Asa Mercer
Donna Martell as Emma Scofield
Jan Shepard as Louella
Dee J. Thompson as Hope
Juney Ellis as Rachel
Nancy Kulp as Ruth
Dan Seymour as Captain
Harry W. Harvey, Sr. as Ben Holladay
Dennis King Jr as Editor
Robert Clarke as Rev. Dr. Scofield
Edmund Cobb as Cop
Leonard P Geer as Seattle Man
Earle Hodgins as Deputy Marshall
A precursor of "Here Come the Brides" starring Robert Brown, , David Soul, Bobby Sherman, Bridget Hanley, Mark Lenard, Joan Blondell, Henry Beckman and Susan Tolsky.
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gatutor · 1 year
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Sally Forrest-Robert Horton "Code two" 1953, de Fred M. Wilcox.
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citizenscreen · 1 year
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Ward Bond and Robert Horton for “Wagon Train” (1957–1965 though Bond left in 1960)
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badmovieihave · 6 months
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Bad movie I have Wagon Train: The Complete Season Two 1958
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'Round Midnight is a jazz standard composed by jazz pianist Thelonious Monk, and is the most recorded jazz standard written by a jazz musician. Despite Monk composing the tune, the first recording was actually by Cootie Williams, who helped Monk with its composition. Williams' original rendition predates Monk's by 3 years - being recorded on August 22, 1944.
I think it'll be interesting to see how different people interpret this standard, both across individual musicians' performances and across styles and instrumentations. I think that kind of variation is what makes jazz special and unique in the world of music - there's no single, correct, or "true" version of any song, just someone's own way, which is in constant communication with the performers and performances they learned from, borrowed from, and were inspired by. Compared to the back catalogs of classical music where there's room for expression but not the same room for experimentation, or to rock or pop which are so chained by copyright it's hard to iterate on shared songs, it's wholly unique.
Jazz can be impenetrable to people who don't know much about it, and I don't feel anything like an expert myself, but hopefully this is a good microcosm to hear different styles and approaches and for people to learn about the whole musical tradition broadly. For this experiment, this recording is the baseline, the root of the whole evolutionary tree. I encourage you to return to it occasionally, compare it to that night's recording of 'Round Midnight, see just how wide the tree of jazz can branch.
Performers in the August 22, 1944 session:
Trumpet: Cootie Williams Trumpet: Ermit V. Perry Trumpet: George Treadwell Trumpet: Lammar Wright Trumpet: Tommy Stevenson Trombone: Ed Burke Trombone: Ed Glover Trombone: Robert Horton Alto sax: Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson Alto sax: Frank Powell Tenor sax: Sam "The Man" Taylor Tenor sax: Lee Pope Baritone sax: Eddie de Verteuil Piano: Bud Powell Guitar: Leroy Kirkland Bass: Carl Pruitt Drums: Sylvester "Vess" Payne
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Cathedral, Mountain, Moon: Single shots like this require planning. The first step is to realize that such an amazing triple-alignment actually takes place. The second step is to find the best location to photograph it. But it was the third step: being there at exactly the right time—and when the sky was clear—that was the hardest. Five times over six years the photographer tried and found bad weather. Finally, just ten days ago, the weather was perfect, and a photographic dream was realized. Taken in Piemonte, Italy, the cathedral in the foreground is the Basilica of Superga, the mountain in the middle is Monviso, and, well, you know which moon is in the background. Here, even though the setting Moon was captured in a crescent phase, the exposure was long enough for doubly reflected Earthlight, called the da Vinci glow, to illuminate the entire top of the Moon. Image Credit & Copyright: Valerio Minato :: [Thanks Robert Scott Horton]
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"The moon suddenly stands up in the darkness, And I see that it is impossible to die. Each moment of time is a mountain."
James Wright, from “Today I Was So Happy, So I Made This Poem,” in The Branch Will Not Break: Poems
[alive on all channels]
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taintedarabesque · 1 month
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the 80’s will never die
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politicaldilfs · 3 days
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Tennessee Governor DILFs
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Bill Haslam, Lamar Alexander, Don Sundquist, Phil Bredesen, Prentice Cooper, Gordon Browning, Ned McWherter, Albert H. Roberts, Austin Peay, Alfred A. Taylor, Jim Nance McCord, Bill Lee, Buford Ellington, Frank G. Clement, Henry Horton, Ray Blanton, Winfield Dunn
And that's a wrap; all 50 states covered. Hope y'all enjoyed!
Follow this tag for the full series of posts.
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garadinervi · 7 months
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The Music of Arnold Schönberg, Vol. VII, Columbia Masterworks / Columbia Records, 1969
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bodyalive · 7 months
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Misión San Francisco de Asís, Ranchos de Taos, NM. Photo: Geraint Smith (Aug 1, 2023) :: [Robert Scott Horton]
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At This Moment
“It is not the body that is important but the atmosphere around it. The atmosphere becomes permeated with this finer vibration, in the stillness. And another quality is there.
An axis begins to appear, of pure attention. There is a sensitivity. This atmosphere, filled with energy. The body, like an envelope.
Respect this atmosphere, this energy contained in the body. And then, even subtler energies can come into you—the Light can come into you.
All my thoughts, feelings, ideas are nothing compared to this precious treasure, this quality of energy that is not mine but what I am.
More and more, with attending to presence, allo'wing higher forces to enter, staying collected, returning, we can live in a new way.
You can serve this energy. And the energy can heal. From it can come my best action in the world, my best action for others. Help each other through living in this pure Attention.”
~ Michel de Salzmann, quoted in Fran Shaw's 'Notes on The Next Attention'
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lobbycards · 3 hours
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The Green Slime, Italian lobby card (Fotobusta), Italian theatrical release 1969
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letterboxd-loggd · 4 months
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Easy to Love (1934) William Keighley
December 30th 2023
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gatutor · 2 years
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Robert Horton-Sally Forrest "Code two" 1953, de Fred M. Wilcox.
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badmovieihave · 7 months
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Bad movie I have The Complete First Season Wagon Train 1957
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