Tribstar TV

September 11, 2021

TV listings, entertainment news and streaming suggestions from your hometown newspaper, serving Terre Haute and the Wabash Valley.

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"The D'Amelio Show" This documentary series follows the lives of Charli and Dixie D'Amelio, two young TikTok content creators and stars with more than 100 million combined followers, as they and parents Marc and Heidi uproot their lives in Connecticut for a move to Hollywood and the bright lights of fame and stardom. (ORIGINAL) "LuLaRich" This four-part docuseries from executive producers/directors Jenner Furst and Julia Willoughby Nason chronicles the unraveling of LuLaRoe, an infamous multi- level-marketing company run by eccentric founders that enticed young mothers with work-from-home opportunities while recruiting independent retailers to peddle their increasingly bizarre and defective clothing products. (ORIGINAL) "You vs. Wild: Out Cold" Bear Grylls is back for another adventure in this interactive special that enables viewers to make the key decisions as he faces harsh winter elements, huge rock walls, freezing dark tunnels and dangerous wildlife in order to survive and save his pilot following a plane crash. (ORIGINAL) The STREAM Scene Where all the top choices can be found in one place! "Descendants: The Royal Wedding" (Sept. 17) In this fourth animated installment of Disney Channel's "Descendants" features, it's the social event of the season in the United States of Auradon as power couple Ben and Mal (voices of Mitchell Hope and Dove Cameron) get ready to tie the knot. Sofia Carson, Booboo Stewart, Sarah Jeffery and Melanie Paxson are also in the voice cast. (ORIGINAL) 10 • Terre Haute Tribune-Star • September 12 - 18, 2021 BEST LAUREN BACALL MOVIES "To Have and Have Not" (1944) The film that brought Bacall, in her screen debut, to the attention of the public – and certainly to that of leading man Humphrey Bogart – this Ernest Hemingway tale is included in a Thursday, Sept. 16, birthday tribute to Bacall on Turner Classic Movies. "The Big Sleep" (1946) By then married to Humphrey Bogart, Bacall reteamed with him and director Howard Hawks in novelist Raymond Chandler's classic mystery that finds detective Philip Marlowe investigating a wealthy family. "Dark Passage" (1947) A woman (Bacall) shelters a suspected wife-killer (Humphrey Bogart) who's determined to find the real murderer. "Key Largo" (1948) Director and co-screenwriter John Huston's excellent take on Maxwell Anderson's play again unites Humphrey Bogart and Bacall, this time as two of the hostages of a crime boss (Edward G. Robinson) at a hotel in the path of a hurricane. "Bright Leaf" (1950) Bacall and Patricia Neal play rivals for a would-be tobacco-industry magnate (Gary Cooper). "How to Marry a Millionaire" (1953) Bacall, Marilyn Monroe and Betty Grable lend glamour to spare to this comedy about several apartment- sharing models determined to land rich husbands. "Woman's World" (1954) Playing the wife of Fred MacMurray, Bacall is half of one of several couples in which the husbands are considered for a huge job promotion. "Blood Alley" (1955) Bacall and John Wayne make an interesting teaming in the drama of a ship's captain helped by villagers who want him to take them to Hong Kong. "Written on the Wind" (1956) Dorothy Malone won an Oscar here, but Bacall has the central female role as a secretary who inspires a romantic rivalry between a geologist and a playboy (Rock Hudson, Robert Stack). "Designing Woman" (1957) Bacall and Gregory Peck make a marvelous romantic-comedy team as recently acquainted newlyweds dismayed to discover they have little in common. "Harper" (1966) Though the part really is a extended cameo, Bacall is terrific as the client who hires Paul Newman's title detective to find her missing husband. "Murder on the Orient Express" (1974) Bacall is properly showy as a socialite who's among the suspects aboard the luxury train in director Sidney Lumet's great all-star take on the Agatha Christie mystery. "The Shootist" (1976) Working again with John Wayne (in his final film), Bacall plays a boarding- house operator who gives his dying-gunfighter character shelter. "The Fan" (1981) In one of her later star-power showcases, Bacall is cast appropriately as a veteran actress who ends up threatened by an obsessive admirer (Michael Biehn). "The Mirror Has Two Faces" (1996) Bacall as Barbra Streisand's mother might seem like a stretch, but it's still fun to see the veteran actresses work in tandem (with Streisand also directing). BY JAY BOBBIN "Key Largo" "To Have and Have Not" "Dark Passage"

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