Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Jan 18, 2024 · January 18, 2024. Cary Grant with Randolph Scott in their house in Santa Monica. From Getty Images. In the spring of 1933, Cary Grant told a fan magazine about his favorite fish dishes.

  2. Randolph Scott (1898–1987) appeared in over one hundred feature films during his career. Feature films. Box office ranking. At the height of his career, exhibitors voted Scott among the most popular stars in the country: 1949 - 12th (US) 1950 - 10th (US) 1951 - 7th (US) 1952 - 10th (US) 1953 - 10th (US) 1954 - 22nd (US) 1955 - 22nd (US)

  3. Mar 3, 1987 · Randolph Scott, a versatile leading man who later specialized in playing the quiet-talking, fast-drawing hero of westerns, died today at his Bel-Air home. He was 89 years old. The actor's...

  4. Mar 2, 1987 · March 2, 1987 12 AM PT. Randolph Scott, the tall handsome cowboy in countless Hollywood Westerns, whose square-jawed countenance and poker-faced stare became the prototype for a generation of...

  5. Randolph Scott is an internationally released storyteller. Created in NY's big apple, he was raised escaping alligators in TX bayous. After relocating to Hollywood, CA Scott attended film schools like UCLA, Columbia, and was awarded entry to AFI as a director fellow during ascension as a filmmaker.

  6. George Randolph Scott (January 23, 1898 – March 2, 1987) was an American film actor, whose Hollywood career spanned from 1928 to 1962. As a leading man for all but the first three years of his cinematic career, Scott appeared in dramas, comedies, musicals, adventures, war, horror and fantasy films, and Westerns.

  7. Boetticher. In Budd Boetticher: Westerns. …writer Burt Kennedy and actor Randolph Scott for a series of taut, psychologically complex westerns. The first was Seven Men from Now (1956), with Scott as an ex-sheriff who methodically tracks down the seven criminals who killed his wife; Lee Marvin was impressive as an opportunistic villain. The Tall T …

  1. People also search for