Barbara Barrie products
5 items from 2011
24 December 2011 3:01 AM, PST | Cinemaretro.com | See recent CinemaRetro news »
By Todd Garbarini
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Like most children of the 1970s, television viewing was a big part of my week. Beginning at 7:30 Pm and ending two and-a-half hours later, my family’s Thursday nights consisted of That’s Hollywood, Mork and Mindy, Angie, Barney Miller, and Carter Country. Not having seen Barney Miller until well into its sixth season, I just assumed that the entire show took place in the police station. Now that the show’s entire series is available in a DVD box set, courtesy of the fine folks at Shout! Factory, my initial impressions of the show were proven wrong. The pilot episode features Barney Miller’s family, specifically his wife, played with charm by Barbara Barrie. Abe Vigoda, Maxwell Gail, and Ron Glass appear from the get-go, and guest star Chu Chu Malave, who played Maria’s boyfriend who tackles »
- nospam@example.com (Cinema Retro)
21 July 2011 8:45 PM, PDT | Movies.com | See recent Movies.com news »
With the annual Tour de France winding up this weekend, it seems like an opportune time to consider an inspiring moment from the most inspirational cycling movie ever made: Breaking Away. Written by the late Steve Tesich, who earned an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay, the movie was also nominated for Best Picture, Best Director (Peter Yates), Best Actress in a Supporting Role (Barbara Barrie), and Best Music (Patrick Williams). Breaking Away is notable for its great cast, especially Dennis Quaid, Daniel Stern, and Jackie Earle Haley, who portray the small circle of friends surrounding Dave Stoller (Dennis Christopher). Barbara Barrie and Paul Dooley play his supportive parents, while Robyn Douglass is the object of his affections. You can also see familiar faces like...
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- Movies.com
27 June 2011 9:45 AM, PDT | Vanity Fair | See recent Vanity Fair news »
One of these headlines ran in yesterday’s edition of the New York Daily News; the other four we made up. See if you can spot the fact. A. Happy Days Mom Marion Ross Admits Vietnam War Architect Robert McNamara Gave Her Athlete’s Foot at Ymca B. Brady Bunch Mom Florence Henderson Admits Ex-Mayor John Lindsay Gave Her Crabs in One-Night-Stand C. Miami Vice Detective Olivia Brown Admits Richard Nixon Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman Gave Her the Measles at the Watergate Hotel D. Suddenly Susan Grandmother Barbara Barrie Admits Former N.Y.P.D. Commissioner Bernie Kerik Gave Her Nongonococcal Urethritis Backstage at the Tony’s E. Matlock Daughter Linda Purl Admits Ex-Governor David Paterson Gave Her Scabies on Cross-Country Train Trip »
15 March 2011 7:26 PM, PDT | Disc Dish | See recent Disc Dish news »
Monterey Media will release the independent film Harvest, starring Robert Loggia (Scarface), Victoria Clark (Main Street) and Jack Carpenter (I Love You, Beth Cooper), on DVD on April 12. Update: Harvest is opening in theaters in New York on May 6, so the DVD release is being postponed until June 21.
Robert Loggia takes it on the road in Harvest.
Set one summer at a beautiful Northeastern shoreline home, the drama follows three generations who gather around their patriarch (Loggia), who has cancer, while his wife (Barbara Barrie, Breaking Away) suffers from dementia. Their daughter Anna (Clark) a divorced woman, cares for her parents in their home, where she still serves as mother to her college-age son, Josh (Carpenter).
Josh has two uncles, one still living in the paternal home (Peter Friedman, The Messenger) and one who is a local politician in the town where they all live (Arye Gross, TV’s Castle). Years of tension, »
- Laurence
10 January 2011 1:59 PM, PST | EW - Inside Movies | See recent EW.com - Inside Movies news »
British director Peter Yates, who died on January 9 at the age of 81, created one of Hollywood’s best car chase scenes in the 1968 thriller Bullitt, tracking a showdown on the hilly streets of San Francisco between Steve McQueen behind the wheel of a Ford Mustang Gt and two bad guys in a Dodge Charger. But for a chase with just as much excitement and even more emotional tug, there’s nothing to match what Yates did in Breaking Away (1979), pitting a teen on a racing bike against a big rig on the roads around Bloomington, Ind. Come to think of it, »
- Lisa Schwarzbaum
5 items from 2011
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