Mary Acres


Biography

Filmography

 

Cast (Feature Film)

Thank God He Met Lizzie (1997)
Babe (1995)

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Stunts (1977) -- (Movie Clip) All Cameras Stand By After credits in which we saw the tie-line to the helicopter tampered with, the first scene finds stunt man Billy (Gary Charles Davis), with Earl (Malachi Throne) directing, undertaking the big stunt, Ray Sharkey the driver, in Stunts, 1977, the first feature from Robert Shaye’s New Line Cinema.
Stunts (1977) -- (Movie Clip) He Was One Of Us We’ve learned that Glen (Robert Forster), who’s taking over as stunt coordinator after his brother was killed on a movie shoot, is giving a lift to writer B.J. (Fiona Lewis), whose car broke down, both greeted by Patti (Joanna Cassidy), Chuck (Bruce Glover) and Paulie (Ray Sharkey), in Stunts, 1977.
Dear Brigitte (1965) -- (Movie Clip) Ludwig Von Beethoven On A Sweatshirt? Professor Leaf (James Stewart) who lives on an old steamboat, is baffled at his daughter (Cindy Carol) and her boyfriend (Fabian), who have plans to sell sweatshirts featuring his suddenly famous math-whiz son, his wife Vina (Glynis Johns) trying to reconcile, in Dear Brigitte, 1965.
Dry White Season, A (1989) -- (Movie Clip) Justice And Law Johannesburg, 1976, after the Soweto riots and the police murder of his gardener and friend, teacher and former rugby star Ben du Toit (Donald Sutherland) visits famous human rights lawyer Ian MacKenzie (Marlon Brando), who at first digresses, in A Dry White Season, directed by Euzhan Palcy.
Dry White Season, A (1989) -- (Movie Clip) Land Of Love And Glory South African schoolteacher Ben (Donald Sutherland) is smuggled into 1976 Soweto by anti-Apartheid activist Stanley (Zakes Mokae) to see the body of his murdered friend (Winston Ntshona), briefly meeting reporter Melanie Bruwer (Susan Sarandon), in A Dry White Season, 1989.
Dry White Season, A (1989) -- (Movie Clip) I'm Not Worried About These Wounds Soweto, 1976, trouble as young Jonathan (Bekhithemba Mpofu) is arrested, we meet his friend Johan (Rowen Elmes) playing rugby, parents (Donald Sutherland, Janet Suzman) watching, then Jonathan’s dad Gordon (Winston Ntshona), opening Euzhan Palcy’s A Dry White Season, 1989.
Dry White Season, A (1989) -- (Movie Clip) Away With Afrikaans! Director Euzhan Palcy’s careful recreation of a representative incident of the Soweto uprising of 1976, with characters Jonathan and Robert (Bekhithemba Mpofu, Tinashe Makoni) in a protest against the teaching of the Afrikaans language, in A Dry White Season, 1989, from a novel by Andrè Brink.
Weary River (1929) -- (Movie Clip) It's Up To You Bootlegger Jerry (Richard Barthelmess) and gal Alice (Betty Compson) begin talking and singing upon adjourning to their apartment, sampling a standard before performing an original by Louis Silvers and Grant Clarke, dubbed by Johnny Murray, in the part-talkie Weary River, 1929.
Weary River (1929) -- (Movie Clip) Sung By Its Composer Starting at the speakeasy owned by incarcerated Jerry (Richard Barthelmess), director Frank Lloyd travels via radio to the prison where he’s performing (title song by Louis Silvers and Grant Clarke), Betty Compson his girl, Louis Natheaux a snarky rival, in the part-talking Weary River. 1929.
Mountains Of The Moon (1990) -- (Movie Clip) Of Course There's The Nile In director Bob Rafelson’s opening, aspiring explorer Speke (Iain Glen) arrives on the east coast of Africa, 1854, Pip Torrens and Philip Voss representing the British army, then Christoper Fulford and Garry Cooper as followers of the vaunted Captain Richard Burton (Patrick Bergin), in Mountains Of The Moon, 1990.
Mountains Of The Moon (1990) -- (Movie Clip) Fevers And Madness Setting out from Zanzibar or thereabouts, Burton (Patrick Bergin) narrates as he and Speke (Iain Glen) begin their famous 1857 expedition to seek the source of the Nile, eventually coming on Delroy Lindo, in trouble with some lions, in director Bob Rafelson's Mountains Of The Moon, 1990.
Mountains Of The Moon (1990) -- (Movie Clip) Royal Geographic Society Explorer Burton (Patrick Bergin) lobbying the society in director Bob Rafelson’s emphatically Victorian London, introducing Lord Murchison (John Savident), Fiona Shaw as Isabel, Richard E. Grant as Larry, Peter Vaughan and Frances Cuka as Lord and Lady Houghton and Craig Crosbie as the poet Swinburne, in Mountains Of The Moon 1990.

Bibliography