Vancouver, WAPast: VP Marketing and New Business Development at Ropak Packaging Born & raised in Cincinnati, OH
Graduated Miami University 1968
Married Ann Bogner in 1975.
Three children and two grand children
In the summer of 2010, my... Born & raised in Cincinnati, OH
Graduated Miami University 1968
Married Ann Bogner in 1975.
Three children and two grand children
In the summer of 2010, my wife and I relocated to Vancouver, Wa., from Newport Beach, Ca.
emiere out of competition in Venice. Besides the essential confrontation with Rocky, pleasantly electrified by Morgan Spectors long-haired, wasp-waisted appearance as a kindly Sly Stallone, excerpts of Anthony Quinn in Ralph Nelsons 1962 film Requiem for a Heavyweight are repeated like a mantra. The f
Ms. Holm was married five times and is survived by two sons and three grandchildren. Her marriage in 1938 to director Ralph Nelson lasted a year but produced a son, Theodor Holm Nelson. In 1940, she married Francis Davies, an English auditor. In 1946, she married airline public relations executive A
Holm first married in 1936 at age 19 with fellow showbiz man Ralph Nelson, but the couple divorced three years later. After two more short-lived marriages, Holm married actor Wesley Addy, with whom she remained for three decades until his death in 1996.
Holm was married five times and is survived by two sons and three grandchildren. Her marriage in 1938 to director Ralph Nelson lasted a year but produced a son, Theodor Holm Nelson. In 1940, she married Francis Davies, an English auditor. In 1946, she married airline public relations executive A. Sc
experiment intended to increase human intelligence. Robertson earned an an Oscar for best actor for his role in the movie, whichwas adaptedfrom the novelFlowers for AlgernonbyDaniel Keyes. Charly, directed by Ralph Nelson,co-starred Claire Bloom, Lilia Skala, Leon Janney and Dick Van Patten.
"I bought the movie rights to the show, and I tried for eight years to persuade a studio to make it," he said in 1968. "Finally I found a new company, ABC Films. I owned 50 percent of the gross, but I gave half of it to Ralph Nelson to direct."
The concept that medical science can increase our intelligence is not new, but in fact was given a glowing accommodation by Ralph Nelson's movie "Charly," which, based on Daniel Keyes's novel "Flowers for Algernon" locates surgery that gives a retarded sweeper in a neighborhood bakery a spectacular