Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Chevron Hall of Stars is an American television anthology series which aired in 1956 in first-run syndication. It was produced by Four Star Productions, and was a half-hour series. Gene Roddenberry’s script The Secret Weapon of 117 was broadcast on the series on March 6, 1956.

  2. Chevron Hall of Stars: With Don Taylor, James Whitmore, Don Rickles, Ted de Corsia. A syndicated anthology television series. It was produced by Four Star Productions, and some of the episodes were intended as pilots for potential series.

    • (32)
    • 1956
    • Comedy, Drama, Western
    • 30
  3. 1956: Chevron Hall of Stars (Fernsehserie, eine Folge) 1956: I Led 3 Lives (Fernsehserie, 2 Folgen als Robert Wesley) 1956–1957: Westpoint (Fernsehserie, 11 Folgen) 1957: The Kaiser Aluminum Hour (Fernsehserie, eine Folge) 1957: True Story (Fernsehserie, eine Folge) 1957: Jane Wyman Show (Fernsehserie, eine Folge, Adaption)

  4. Stein und Staub greift eine Idee wieder auf, die Star-Trek-Schöpfer Gene Roddenberry bereits 1956 in seiner ersten verfilmten Geschichte, der Folge The Secret Weapon of 117 aus der Serie Chevron Hall of Stars, verarbeitet hatte. In dieser spionieren zwei Außerirdische die Erde aus, indem sie sich als Menschen tarnen, doch nach und ...

  5. Chevron Hall of Stars (TV Series 1956) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  6. Chevron Hall of Stars (1956) Episode Guide compiled by The Classic TV Archive with contributions by: Rina Fox references: TV Guide / Library of Congress (telnet://locis.loc.gov) Internet Movie Database (https://us.imdb.com) UCLA Film and Television Archiv ...

  7. June 8, 1956. A reformed hobo named March discovers how complicated and sometimes dangerous normal living is for a "king of the road." Rate. A Matter of Nerve. April 6, 1956. A man who has repeatedly failed at suicide decides to confess to a murder committed by someone else and be executed in his place. Rate. Across the Dust. January 10, 1956.