Ken Higgins


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Movie Clip

Georgy Girl (1966) -- (Movie Clip) Opening, Hey There! Lynn Redgrave is adorable and the title tune (By Tom Springfield and Jim Dale, sung by the Australian group "The Seekers" featuring Judith Durham, and a number-two chart hit in the U.S.) irresistible in the opening sequence from Georgy Girl, 1966.
Georgy Girl (1966) -- (Movie Clip) How's Life In The Kitchen Sink? Having fled the flat because her roommate’s having intimate relations, Lynn Redgrave (title character) attempts to slip into her previous residence, where her parents worked as servants to lustful upper-class Londoner Leamington (James Mason), in Georgy Girl,1966.
Georgy Girl (1966) -- (Movie Clip) Praying Mantis? Frumpy Georgy (Lynn Redgrave) begins in a reverie which ends in the apartment with roommate Meredith (Charlotte Rampling) and leads to a social disappointment in Georgy Girl, 1966.
Georgy Girl (1966) -- (Movie Clip) The Solemn And Binding Character At the insistence of Jos (Alan Bates), Londoner Meredith (Charlotte Rampling) has agreed they might as well get married now that she’s pregnant for the third time, joined by Lynn Redgrave (title character), returning to their Maida Vale, Westminster apartment, in Georgy Girl,1966.
Salt And Pepper -- (Movie Clip) I Like The Way You Dance Sammy Davis Jr. (as London night-club co-owner Charles Salt) co-wrote this fairly routine rock'n'roll number, but a nice performance, directed by Richard Donner, using a guitar as a prop, from Salt And Pepper, 1968.
Salt And Pepper -- (Movie Clip) The Black Sheep Opening scene and portion of credit sequence shot on location in London's SoHo, Peter Lawford and Sammy Davis Jr. as night-club owner buddies, grilled by Inspector Crabbe (Michael Bates), from Salt And Pepper, 1968.
Salt And Pepper -- (Movie Clip) She Arrived Home Dead Cops Crabbe (Michael Bates) and Walters (Graham Stark) interviewing night-club co-owners and roommates Peter Lawford and Sammy Davis Jr. (title characters) about a girl seen in their SoHo pad, in Salt And Pepper, 1968.
Hot Millions -- (Movie Clip) I Believe It Was Hitler Paroled con man Pendleton (co-screenwriter Peter Ustinov), posing as "Smith," his first interview with American big-shot Kemper (Karl Malden), bluffing computer expert Gnatpole (Bob Newhart) with newly-acquired technical jargon, in Hot Millions, 1968.
Hot Millions -- (Movie Clip) When's Coffee Break? Co-screenwriter Peter Ustinov, as con-man Pendleton, his scam underway, and Patty (Maggie Smith), who have flats in the same house, are surprised to meet at work, Karl Malden their boss, early in Hot Millions, 1968.
Hot Millions -- (Movie Clip) Not A Moth Man Con-man Pendleton (co-writer Peter Ustinov), fresh from prison, having scammed his way into a posh London club, contrives to persuade an erratic computer expert (Robert Morley) to disappear, early in Hot Millions, 1968.
Hot Millions -- (Movie Clip) Wormwood Scrubs At what appears to be the real Wormwood Scrubs prison in west London, co-screenwriter Peter Ustinov (as "Pendleton"), Peter Jones as the prison governor, parting ways, the irresistible opening from Hot Millions, 1968.
Darling (1965) -- (Movie Clip) This Is Me Diana (Julie Christie) introducing herself via interview, along with Robert (Dirk Bogarde) as the TV reporter producing a profile, in John Schlesinger's Darling, 1965.

Bibliography