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Burr Steers (born 1966) is an American actor, screenwriter and director. 1966 (MCMLXVI) was a common year starting on Saturday (the link is to a full 1966 calendar). ...
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A son of Newton Steers (1917—1993), a Republican congressman from Maryland, and Nina Gore Auchincloss, a stepsister of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and a half-sister of the writer Gore Vidal, Steers has had minor roles in a few of Quentin Tarantino's films, playing Roger (or "Flock of seagulls") in Pulp Fiction and providing one of the radio voices in Reservoir Dogs. He also has appeared in The Last Days of Disco, Fix and Gore Vidal's Billy the Kid. Newton Ivan Steers, Jr. ...
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Gore Vidal in 1948, photographed by Carl Van Vechten Eugene Luther Gore Vidal (born October 3, 1925) is a prolific, versatile American writer of novels, stage plays, screenplays, and essays, and, of late, a liberal political pundit. ...
Quentin Jerome Tarantino (born March 27, 1963) is an American film director, actor, and Oscar-winning screenwriter. ...
A Flock of Seagulls was a British New Wave band that found success in the U.S. in the early 1980s. ...
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Reservoir Dogs is the 1992 debut feature film of director Quentin Tarantino. ...
The Last Days of Disco is a 1998 movie directed by Whit Stillman. ...
The word fix has several possible meanings: a fix is the result of position fixing in navigation a fix is a dose of a drug taken by an addict to fix is to prepare or to repair something to fix is to fasten one object to another using adhesive or...
He wrote and directed Igby Goes Down in 2002, an acidic urban coming of age film that starred Kieran Culkin and Susan Sarandon. It did not do well in the Midwestern section of the United States, Steers said in an interview with Jamie Russell that aired on the BBC. "I feel no relation to that part of America. It's really depressing," he said. "I got sent to a military school, which was in Indiana, which is just so flat. It's a sea of polyester, aluminium sidings, and these phenomenally Caucasian people. It's spooky, that's the only way to describe it."[1] Igby Goes Down is a 2002 film that follows the life of Igby Slocumb. ...
Kieran Culkin Kieran Culkin (born September 30, 1982 in New York City, New York) is an American actor. ...
Susan Sarandon (born October 4, 1946) is an Academy Award-winning American actress. ...
The Midwest is a common name for a region of the United States of America. ...
The British Broadcasting Corporation, invariably known as the BBC (and also informally known as the Beeb or Auntie) is the largest broadcasting corporation in the world, employing 26,000 staff in the UK alone and with a budget of £4 billion. ...
Steers also was the screenwriter of the film How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, which starred Kate Hudson and Matthew McConaughey. He has directed episodes of the television series Weeds, The L Word, and Big Love. How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days is a 2003 motion picture. ...
Kate Garry Hudson[1] (born April 19, 1979) is an American film actress. ...
Matthew David McConaughey (born November 4, 1969) is an American actor. ...
Weeds may be: Weed, an undesired plant growth (weeds, plural) Slang for Cannabis, the herb used for its psychoactive effects, but also grown into hemp Weeds (television), the 2005 Showtime television series starring Mary-Louise Parker and Elizabeth Perkins. ...
This article or section may need to be cleaned up and rewritten because it describes a work of fiction in a primarily in-universe style. ...
Big Love is an HBO television drama about a polygamous family, starring Bill Paxton, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Chloë Sevigny and Ginnifer Goodwin. ...
His brother Hugh Auchincloss Steers (1963—1995) was an American figurative painter whose later works often focussed on AIDS as a theme. He has another brother, Ivan Steers, and five stepsiblings from his mother's second marriage to Michael Straight, an editor of The New Republic who also was part of the Cambridge Five, a Soviet spy ring of the 1930s whose members included Anthony Blunt, Kim Philby, Guy Burgess, and Donald Maclean. Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS or Aids) is a collection of symptoms and infections in humans resulting from the specific damage to the immune system caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). ...
Michael Straight Michael Whitney Straight, (September 1, 1916 â January 4, 2004) was an American magazine publisher, novelist, patron of the arts, and a member of the prominent Whitney family. ...
For other uses, see the disambiguation section. ...
The Cambridge Five (also sometimes known as the Cambridge Four) was a ring of British spies who passed information to the Soviet Union during World War II and into the early 1950s. ...
Anthony Frederick Blunt (26 September 1907 â 26 March 1983) was an English art historian and the Fourth Man of the Cambridge Five, a group of spies working for the Soviet Union during the Cold War. ...
Harold Adrian Russell Kim Philby or H.A.R. Philby (1 January 1912 â 11 May 1988) was a high ranking member of British intelligence who led a lifelong career as a spy for the Soviet Union. ...
Guy Francis De Moncy Burgess (16 April 1911 â 30 August 1963) was a British-born intelligence officer and double agent who worked for the Soviet Union and was part of the Cambridge Five spy ring that betrayed allied secrets to the Soviets before and during the Cold War. ...
Sir Donald Maclean (January 9, 1864 â June 15, 1932), was a Liberal politician in the United Kingdom. ...
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