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  1. Feb 17, 2012 · Jill Kinmont Boothe, an Eastern Sierra icon, passed away on Feb. 9. She was a week shy of her 76th birthday. A national ski champion who had a Sports Illustrated cover on her resume, Jill’s career was cut short by a ski accident in the winter of 1955 which left her a quadriplegic, Kinmont Boothe rose above her physical limitations to become ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mad_Dog_TimeMad Dog Time - Wikipedia

    English. Budget. $8 million. Box office. $107,874. Mad Dog Time (also known as Trigger Happy) is a 1996 American ensemble crime comedy film written and directed by Larry Bishop and starring Ellen Barkin, Gabriel Byrne, Richard Dreyfuss, Jeff Goldblum and Diane Lane. The film is notable for the various cameo appearances, including the first, and ...

  3. art department coordinator (as Jennifer Hirsch) Sharon Lipton ... floral designer Jacqueline McArdle ... painter Edward J. McCarthy ... leadperson (as Edward McCarthy) Patti McNulty ... art department coordinator (as Patricia McNulty) Louis Medrano ... swing David Orszag ... painter Mark Peters

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  5. Dec 14, 2005 · His performance earned him an Emmy nomination and he was cast in a few more films: Mad Dog Time (1996), Lost Highway (1997), but his physical ailments prohibited him from performing on a regular basis. In 1998, The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington gave Pryor the first Mark Twain Prize for humor.

    • Larry Bishop
    • Larry Bishop
  6. Nov 29, 1996 · Larry Bishop. “Mad Dog Time” is the first movie I have seen that does not improve on the sight of a blank screen viewed for the same length of time. Oh, I've seen bad movies before. But they usually made me care about how bad they were. Watching “Mad Dog Time” is like waiting for the bus in a city where you're not sure they have a bus line.

  7. 55. R 1 hr 33 min Nov 8th, 1996 Action, Crime, Comedy. With his boss in the madhouse, a mobster is temporary boss of the criminal empire just as vicious rivals threaten the control of the empire ...

  8. The Mad Dog. 1943 Rufino Tamayo (Mexican, 1899–1991) Oaxacan-born artist Rufino Tamayo began a series of paintings of animals in the early 1940s that focused on the human states of anxiety and desperation, as exemplified in The Mad Dog. Living in New York City at the time, Tamayo was probably influenced by the animal imagery found in Picasso ...

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