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Topic: Meet Nero Wolfe


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 The Columnists.com has columns about entertainment, television, music, and screen classics
For example, I'd love to see that great character actor Edward Arnold as Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe and loveable Lionel Stander as his sidekick, Archie, in "Meet Nero Wolfe," which Columbia released in 1936.
Nor is the second Nero Wolfe film: "The League of Frightened Men" (1937) with Walter Connolly as the corpulent sleuth.
The Ron Miller caricature is © 2001 by Jim Hummel.
www.thecolumnists.com /miller/miller215.html   (1176 words)

  
 Nero Wolfe (2001) - Episode Guide - TV Tome
While Archie is upstairs trying to convince Wolfe to meet with a prospective client, someone is in the office making sure she won't ever tell Nero her story.
Nero Wolfe is consulted by a boy, a street kid named Peter Drossos, who makes a profession out of wiping the windshields of parked cars with a rag.
A women arrives at the brownstone to say that Wolfe's long-lost adopted daughter has been falsely accused of robbery and needs his help.
www.tvtome.com /NeroWolfe_2001/guide.html   (1176 words)

  
 Rita Hayworth
Hayworth was hired by Columbia studios for a small role in "Meet Nero Wolfe" (1936), and she also appeared in several Westerns for smaller studios.
Hayworth made her first screen appearance when she was 8 years old, dancing with her parents in two short musicals titled "Anna Case with the Dancing Cancinos" and "La Fiesta," both released in 1926.
Hayworth attempted to revive her career in early 1972 with stage performances, but she was unable to remember her lines.
www.cemeteryguide.com /hayworth.html   (928 words)

  
 P.G. Wodehouse: P.I. Writer by Rudyard Kennedy
Bunged down on paper by Wodehouse and Stout fan Rudyard Kennedy, who feels that while the immortal Nero Wolfe could detect rings around any of Wodehouse's licensed PIs, he just might yet meet his match if he ever has to go up against the all-knowing and equally immortal Jeeves.
Wodehouse also wrote about a number of other detectives, but they tended to be one-shot characters with smallish supporting roles in novels already stuffed to bursting with farcical activity.
Well, virtually every one of Wodehouse's many stories and novels takes place in the same interconnected little world, and given Wodehouse's continued reliance on farcical plots involving impersonations, mistaken identities and stolen heirlooms, it's only natural that a private detective would be called in to sort out at least some of the strange goings-on.
www.thrillingdetective.com /non_fiction/e007.html   (995 words)

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