Glynis Angell


Biography

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Pyramid, The (1976) -- (Movie Clip) North Rock Elementary After opening with suburban Dallas school-day idyllic domestic scenes, stunt-man/auteur Gary Kent gives a motorist a heart attack, causing a calamitous crash, with reporter L.A. (Ira Hawkins) and cameraman Chris (C.W. “Charley” Brown) arriving, in the low-rent art-cult indie hybrid The Pyramid, 1976.
Pyramid, The (1976) -- (Movie Clip) It Is A War, Man Slamming lunch in Dallas after covering a school-bus disaster, reporter L.A. and shooter Chris (C.W. Charley Brown) recall their story about a fire-walker, and muse about the state of affairs in their city, crossing through Dealey Plaza (where John Kennedy was shot), in director Gary Kent’s independent feature The Pyramid, 1976.
Pearls Of The Deep (1966) -- (Movie Clip) Did The Workers Like It? From the vignette The Restaurant The World, directed by Vera Chyltilova, (her husband, Jaroslav Kucera, the cinematographer), Alzbeta Lastovkov operates the automat, debriefing artist Vladimir Boudnik, Vera Mrazkova a passing bride, in the anthology Pearls Of The Deep, 1966.
Letter, The (1929) -- (Movie Clip) No Company But Natives Opening scene, first appearance by famed stage actress Jeanne Eagels in her only surviving sound film, as British rubber-plantation wife Leslie, in the role later played by Bette Davis, with Reginald Owen as her husband Robert, in The Letter, 1929, from the story and play by W.S. Maugham.
Letter, The (1929) -- (Movie Clip) You Wanted The Truth Conventional, early-sound treatment of the incident William Wyler used to open his re-make with Bette Davis, as Leslie (Jeanne Eagels), wife of a British rubber plantation owner, confronts her lover (Herbert Marshall), in The Letter, 1929, based on W.S. Maugham.
Letter, The (1929) -- (Movie Clip) Damned Clever, These Chinese O.P. Heggie as British defense lawyer Joyce in colonial Malaya receives pivotal news from his sneaky assistant On Chi Seng (Tamaki Yoshiwara), his racist catch-phrase closing line not from the original W.S. Maugham play, in the first movie version of The Letter, 1929.

Bibliography