Art Cohn


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Movie Clip

Tomorrow Is Another Day (1947) -- (Movie Clip) You're Not Through Paying Steve Cochran is inmate Bill, getting his going-away talk from the prison warden Harry Antrim, having evidently spent most of his life incarcerated, not clear what the guy waiting outside (John Kellogg) is up to, opening Tomorrow Is Another Day, 1951, also starring Ruth Roman.
Tomorrow Is Another Day (1947) -- (Movie Clip) You Can't Dance Bill (Steve Cochran), convicted of murder as a pre-teen, just-paroled and having left his hometown due to bad press, now in New York, not familiar with taxi-dancing etiquette, meets Nikki (Lynne Millan) then the more cordial Cay (Ruth Roman), in Tomorrow Is Another Day, 1951.
Tomorrow Is Another Day (1947) -- (Movie Clip) Team Up Or Split Up On the run but not quite committed to each other, after the death of her cop boyfriend, whom she’s allowed to believe he shot, newly-paroled Bill (Steve Cochran) and taxi-dancer Cay (Ruth Roman) have checked into an out-of-the-way motel, in Tomorrow Is Another Day, 1951.
Set-Up, The (1949) -- (Movie Clip) Let's Go Home Early Two sections of Julie (Audrey Totter) on her long walk, skipping the fight, in between husband Stoker (Robert Ryan) in the locker room with defeated Tony (Philip Pine), Mickey (David Fresco) and Luther (James Edwards), in Robert Wise's The Set-Up, 1949.
Set-Up, The (1949) -- (Movie Clip) Everybody Makes Book On Something Philosophical low-rent boxers, Stoker (Robert Ryan), pre-fight in the locker room, with delusional Gunboat (David Clarke), Gus (Wallace Ford), Tony (Philip Pine) and Mickey (David Fresco), in Robert Wise's The Set-Up, 1949.
Set-Up, The (1949) -- (Movie Clip) Eggs In The Coffee From the opening scenes, manager Tiny (George Tobias) planning with Danny (Edwin Max) to throw a boxing match, trainer Red (Percy Helton) suggesting they should tell their fighter, in Robert Wise's The Set-Up, 1949.
Set-Up, The (1949) -- (Movie Clip) You'll Always Be Just One Punch Away First scene for itinerant boxer Stoker (Robert Ryan) and wife Julie (Audrey Totter), both unaware that his fight that night is being fixed, early in Robert Wise's The Set-Up, 1949.
Glory Alley (1952) -- (Movie Clip) Title Song New Orleans boxer Socks (Ralph Meeker) is leaving to fight in Korea, so this sendoff with pals (John McIntire, Gilbert Roland et al) features a song from his trainer Shadow (Louis Armstrong), also the world’s greatest trumpeter, an original by Mack David and Jay Livingston, in Glory Alley, 1952.
Glory Alley (1952) -- (Movie Clip) St. Louis Blues Just the musical number, the W.C. Handy standard, Leslie Caron, as New Orleans gal Angie, in a rare vocal performance, Charles O’Curran the credited choreographer, and the band led by trombone giant Jack Teagarden, in Raoul Walsh’s Glory Alley, 1952, starring Ralph Meeker.
Glory Alley (1952) -- (Movie Clip) Socks Barbarrosa Joining Raoul Walsh’s opening narrated by John McIntire as journalist Gabe, with Ralph Meeker as New Orleans boxer Socks Barbarossa, Gilbert Roland and Louis Armstrong in his corner, Pat Valentino his opponent and Kurt Kasznar his blind friend “The Judge,” in Glory Alley, 1952.
Glory Alley (1952) -- (Movie Clip) You Have A Flaw Boxer Socks (Ralph Meeker) in a New Orleans bar, mocked by a gambler (Dan Seymour) for walking out on a fight, trying to explain to blind friend “The Judge” (Kurt Kasznar), who’s his girlfriend’s father, his trainer, musician Shadow (Louis Armstrong) philosophical, in Glory Alley, 1952.
Carbine Williams (1952) -- (Movie Clip) Without Any Frosting Early on, we know James Stewart left a big job with a gun company in Connecticut, to come home to wife Maggie (Jean Hagen) in North Carolina, because their son (Bobby Hyatt) has a problem, so he's taken to meet "Cap" (Wendell Corey) at the local prison, launching a flashback, in the bio-pic Carbine Williams, 1952.

Bibliography