Save some popcorn for Kate!
During a visit to the Mist youth program in South Wales on Wednesday, Princess Kate met with families who use the center, including grandmother Christine Jones, 47, and her grandchildren Emily Davies, 9, and Alfie Thomas, 7.
Kate spoke with the children and asked what they enjoyed doing with their grandmother. After hearing that they had gone to see Moana at the movie theater, she replied: “I haven’t seen it. You lucky things.
“It is a real treat to go to the cinema, isn’t it?”
Kate then faced the wind and rain to meet with families gathered outside the center,...
During a visit to the Mist youth program in South Wales on Wednesday, Princess Kate met with families who use the center, including grandmother Christine Jones, 47, and her grandchildren Emily Davies, 9, and Alfie Thomas, 7.
Kate spoke with the children and asked what they enjoyed doing with their grandmother. After hearing that they had gone to see Moana at the movie theater, she replied: “I haven’t seen it. You lucky things.
“It is a real treat to go to the cinema, isn’t it?”
Kate then faced the wind and rain to meet with families gathered outside the center,...
- 2/22/2017
- by Erin Hill
- PEOPLE.com
Hedy Lamarr: 'Invention' and inventor on Turner Classic Movies (photo: Hedy Lamarr publicity shot ca. early '40s) Two Hedy Lamarr movies released during her heyday in the early '40s — Victor Fleming's Tortilla Flat (1942), co-starring Spencer Tracy and John Garfield, and King Vidor's H.M. Pulham, Esq. (1941), co-starring Robert Young and Ruth Hussey — will be broadcast on Turner Classic Movies on Wednesday, November 12, 2014, at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. Pt, respectively. Best known as a glamorous Hollywood star (Ziegfeld Girl, White Cargo, Samson and Delilah), the Viennese-born Lamarr (née Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler), who would have turned 100 on November 9, was also an inventor: she co-developed and patented with composer George Antheil the concept of frequency hopping, currently known as spread-spectrum communications (or "spread-spectrum broadcasting"), which ultimately led to the evolution of wireless technology. (More on the George Antheil and Hedy Lamarr invention further below.) Somewhat ironically,...
- 11/2/2014
- by Andre Soares
- Alt Film Guide
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