- published: 28 Feb 2016
- views: 124458
Donald Robert Marshall (born March 23, 1932) is a retired Canadian ice hockey forward. He was born in Verdun, Quebec.
Don played in the National Hockey League from 1951 to 1972. During this time, he played for the New York Rangers, Buffalo Sabres, Toronto Maple Leafs and Montreal Canadiens. While with Montreal, Don won five Stanley Cups 1956-57-58-59-60.
Marshall played 1176 career NHL games, scoring 265 goals and 324 assists for 589 points.
Actors: Martin Milner (actor), Veda Ann Borg (actress), Groucho Marx (writer), Gregory Marshall (actor), Richard Baer (writer), Marie Brown (actress), Lugene Sanders (actress),
Plot: Riley worked in an aircraft plant in California, but viewers usually saw him at home, cheerfully disrupting life with his malapropisms and ill timed intervention into minor problems. His stock answer to every turn of fate became a catch phrase: 'What a revoltin' development this is!"
Keywords: airplane, based-on-radio-series, character-name-in-title, factory-worker, sitcom, teenage-boyActors: Dorothy Dandridge (actress), Arthur Treacher (actor), Roland Young (actor), Billie Burke (actress), Sam Harris (actor), Larry Steers (actor), Hank Mann (actor), Louis Jean Heydt (actor), Ray Milland (actor), Bert Moorhouse (actor), Tom Quinn (actor), Cyril Ring (actor), Mike Lally (actor), Syd Saylor (actor), Ethel Griffies (actress),
Plot: Sent by her employers on an errand to the home of the wealthy Mrs. Vincent, Irene O'Dare meets Don, a friend of Bob, Mrs. Vincent's son. Attracted to Irene, Don decides to invest some money in Bob's latest venture, the "Madame Lucy" dress shop, in order to give Irene a job there as a model. She is very successful and Bob also becomes attracted to her. Smith, the manager assigns Irene and other models to display gowns at Mrs. Vincent's charity ball, but Irene ruins the gown she was to wear, and appears instead in a quaint blue dress that had belonged to her mother... and it is a big hit. A guest, Princess Minetti, places her as the niece of Ireland's Lady O'Dare, and Irene does not deny the relationship. Smith decides to set her up in a Park Avenue suite as the niece of Lady O'Dare, so that she can attend socially important gatherings wearing and displaying, of course, Madame Lucy gowns. A jealous model tells the truth to a newspaper columnist who writes an expose, which somewhat strains the relationship between Irene and Don, who had been away, was unaware of the scheme and is the real owner behind the "Madame Lucy" front.
Keywords: african-american, apartment, ball, ball-gown, based-on-stage-musical, bermuda, black-and-white-and-color, blue-dress, boat, brother-sister-relationship