How many of Bob Hope’s movies have the word favorite in the title?
Three of Bob Hope’s movies have the word favorite in the title:
My Favorite Blonde (1942), My Favorite Brunette (1947), and My Favorite Spy (1951).
No. W. C. Fields’s gravestone does not read, “On the whole, I’d rather be in Philadelphia” In the first place, he isn’t in a grave: his ashes are housed in a vault. Second, the epitaph doesn’t appear there. Third, it wasn’t his joke. The line first appeared in the magazine Vanity Fair in the 1920s….
The director’s mother, Susanna Pasolini, played Mary in Pier Paolo Pasolini’s The Gospel According to St. Matthew (1966).
One critic called the haircut of Samson (Victor Mature) by Delilah (Hedy Lamarr) in the $3 million 1949 Cecil B. DeMille epic Samson and Delilah, “the most expensive haircut in history”.
Silent film star Francis X. Bushman (1883-1966) was known as “The Handsomest Man in the World”.
Chariots of Fire (1981) portrays the 1924 Olympics in Paris.
The brain set in Fantastic Voyage (1966) was one hundred by two hundred feet and thirty-five feet high. The web-like nerve cells were made of spun fiberglass.