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Ben Blue (Benjamin Bernstein) (September 12, 1901 – March 7, 1975) was a Canadian actor and comedian. September 12 is the 255th day of the year (256th in leap years). ...
1901 was a common year starting on Tuesday (see link for calendar). ...
March 7 is the 66th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (67th in Leap years). ...
1975 was a common year starting on Wednesday (the link is to a full 1975 calendar). ...
Actors in priod costume sharing a joke whilst waiting btween takes during location filming. ...
A comedian (also comedienne, female) is a person who attempts to make people laugh through a variety of methods, normally through joke telling, or a stream of funny banter. ...
Born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, Bernstein emigrated to the United States where he became a dance instructor, a dance school owner, and a nightclub proprietor. He began his motion picture career doing short films for Warner Brothers Studios in 1926, and later worked at the Hal Roach Studios, Paramount Studios, and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. He also, like his "The Big Broadcast of 1938" co-star Bob Hope, was a radio comedian. In 1950, he had his own TV series, The Ben Blue Show, and was a regular on The Frank Sinatra Show. This article needs cleanup. ...
A nightclub (often shortened to club in both the UK and US) is an entertainment venue which does its primary business after dark. ...
For other uses see film (disambiguation) Film refers to the celluliod media on which movies are printed Film — also called movies, the cinema, the silver screen, moving pictures, photoplays, picture shows, flicks, or motion pictures, — is a field that encompasses motion pictures as an art form or as part of...
Short subject is an American film industry term that historically has referred to any film in the format of two reels, or approximately 20 minutes running time, or less. ...
The WB Shield, used from 2001 to late 2003. ...
Harold Eugene Roach ( January 14, 1892 – November 2, 1992) was an American film and television producer from 1910s to 1980s, born in Elmira, New York. ...
The Paramount Pictures logo used from 1988 to 1989. ...
For alternate meanings of MGM, see MGM (disambiguation). ...
Leslie Townes Hope KBE (May 29, 1903 â July 27, 2003), best known as Bob Hope, was a famous entertainer, having appeared in vaudeville, on Broadway, on radio and television, movies and in army concerts. ...
In 1951, Blue began concentrating on managing and appearing in nightclubs in Hollywood and San Francisco. He made the cover of TV Guide's June 11, 1954 Special Issue along with Alan Young, headlining an edition featuring that season's summer replacement shows. ...
This page is a candidate for speedy deletion. ...
TV Guide is the name of two North American weekly magazines about TV programming, one in the United States and one in Canada. ...
Alan Young (born 19 November 1919) was an actor best known for his television role opposite a talking horse, Mister Ed. ...
In 1958, he ran a significant short-running television program called Ben Blue's Brothers. The show didn't get picked upon a network, but the pilot was seen in 1965. In the comedic movie It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, Ben got picked as the airplane pilot. Ben Blue started making cameos in comedy movies around the 1960s. He especially had a part in Jerry Van Dyke's TV series Accidental Family in 1967. He worked his way until his final film appearance, Where Were You When the Lights Went Out?, in 1968. He made his last TV appearance in Land of the Giants in 1969. Its a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World is a comedy movie that followed the Hollywood trend in the 1960s of producing gigantic and epic films as a way to woo audiences into movie theaters. ...
Jerry Van Dyke (born July 27, 1931 in Danville, Illinois) is an American comedian and actor. ...
Land of the Giants is an American television show of the 1960s which tells the tale of the crew and passengers of a sub-orbital transport plane which is accidentally transported to a world in which all life forms are huge in comparison to them. ...
Ben Blue passed away in Hollywood in 1975 and was interred in the Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery in Culver City, California. After his death, his career papers covering 1935 to 1955 were deposited in the Special Collections at the U.C.L.A Library. ...
The Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery is located at 6001 W. Centinela Avenue, in Culver City, California. ...
Culver City sign, at the northeast corner of the Sepulveda Boulevard and Centinela Avenue intersection, near the 405 and the 90 freeway interchange. ...
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