 | Run4Jennifer - Jane Palmer in Training
Tags: for, life, race
Description: Video of desperate charity runner!!
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 | Sarah jane palmer!!
Tags: SARAHH
Description: His name is albert and
he is so smexii
LEAVE ME A COMMENT!!!
[i have no makeup on]
i look gross
[pluss my flippin camera girl
was laughing so hard she
dropped the camera
so thts why im kinda showing my face a
lil because i had to film it]
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 | Nora Jane Vizas Palmer
Tags: Jane, Nora, Palmer, Vizas
Description: My beautiful niece, Nora Jane Vizas Palmer. Born Monday, July 14, 2008 at 2:04am.
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 | The Puppini Sisters sing I'm Sending A Letter To Daddy
Tags: Amanda, Baby, Bette, Crawford, Davis, ICA, Jane, Joan, Palmer, Puppini
Description: The Puppini Sisters surprise opening for Amanda Palmer at the ICA in London. They chose this song from the film Whatever Happened to Baby Jane, which Marcella claims is an autobiography of her life with her sister Silvia.
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 | Jane Eyre/Edward's Secret
Tags: C'est, Eyre, Jane, la, Stephens, Toby, Via
Description: Fan video set to C'est la Via (Emerson Lake & Palmer)
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 | Around the World in Eighty Ways.flv
Tags: "street, Circus, clowning., diablo, juggling, performance", unicyling, Walkabout
Description: Around the World in Eighty Ways is a walkabout act performed by The National Elf service, www.thenationalelfservice.com. Video filmed and edited by Sarah Jane Palmer.
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 | Darkness Round The Sun
Tags: Alexz, Damhnait, Darkness, Doyle, Instant, Johnson, Palmer, Patsy, Round, Sewer, Star, Sun, The, Zoie
Description: This fan music video is dedicated to Zoie Palmer, the actress who played Patsy Sewer in season 2 and 3. I really miss Zoie in the show so I decided to show how much by making this video.
I am aware that the song repeats the 2nd verse. When I mixed it, I thought it flowed nice together with Alexz and Damhnait's version of the song "Darkness Round The Sun"
Credits: The-N, CTV and Epitome Pictures Inc.
By: Jane
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 | The Wonderful World of Douglas Sirk - Jane Wyman 1954
Tags: 1954, Agnes, Barbara, Blind, Blue, Dancing, Danube, Douglas, Hudson, Jane, Kruger, Moorehead, Otto, Rock, Rush, Sirk, Switzerland, Wyman
Description: Magnificent Obsession by Douglas Sirk 1954 with Jane Wyman, Rock Hudson, Barbara Rush, Agnes Moorehead, Otto Kruger - This second film version of Lloyd C. Douglas' spiritual novel Magnificent Obsession is in its own way as successful as the first (filmed in 1935) in glossing over the plot holes and logic gaps in the original novel. Rock Hudson plays Bob Merrick, a reckless playboy who is indirectly responsible for the death of a kindly and much-beloved doctor. The dead man's wife, Helen Phillips (Jane Wyman), refuses to accept Bob's apologies. When Helen is accidentally blinded, Bob decides to "do right" by her anonymously, illustrating author Douglas' curious edict that the best sort of good deed is the one for which you're not rewarded. In record time, Bob becomes a brilliant physician, and it is he who performs the sight-restoring surgery on Helen. Rather than fade into the woodwork unheralded, Bob is at last forgiven by Helen, who has fallen in love with him during her sightless months without even knowing it. Luxuriously produced by Ross Hunter and directed con brio by Douglas Sirk, Magnificent Obsession was one of the most successful of Universal's big-budget "weepers" of the 1950s ----- Movie Review Published August 5, 1954 New York Times = MOVIEGOERS who fondly remember Universal's "Magnificent Obsession" of eighteen years ago should rejoice in the faithful remake at Loew's State. Those who wince at the mere mention of the Lloyd C. Douglas novel, regarding it as a slick sermon conveyed through an appealing romance, are not likely to change their views.
Produced in Technicolor by Ross Hunter, and co-starring Jane Wyman and Rock Hudson in the original Irene Dunne and Robert Taylor roles, the new version is unquestionably a handsome one. Better still, generally restrained performances at least dignify a moist text, which may seem inspiration to some, pure corn to others. It all depends.
Here, again, is Dr. Douglas' own compound of retribution, philosophy and love. Deleting one major character and a few incidents, Robert Blees' scenario tenderly develops the relationship of a fine young woman and the millionaire rake indirectly responsible for both her widowhood and her blindness. For Mr. Douglas, of course, it wasn't enough to carry these two people through the years, letting the lady's incurability alone. At any rate, the inevitable climax, when Mr. Hudson, turned surgeon, restores her sight, seems far more lifelike than the underlying text.
For the hero's real salvation, we learn, stems primarily from the business of doing random good "without letting anybody know about it." This, by cracky, is the obsession magnificent, passed on to Mr. Hudson by an artist, Otto Kruger, and actually nothing more than a furtive application of the Golden Rule, which we'll take straight and undiluted. At one point, Mr. Kruger even links the urgent anonymity to "a Man who died on the cross at the age of 33."
Nearly two-thirds of the firm harps, literally, on the hero's oblique fixation, under Douglas Sirk's easy-going direction, as an unseen choir sings near by. For our money, the only miracle is the emergence of one credible performance, let alone a handful.
Barbara Rush, Agnes Moorehead, Gregg Palmer and Mr. Kruger are neatly effective as sideline friends of the beset couple. But primary credit for mooring the picture to an earthly and earthy plane belongs to the two stars. In appealing contrast to Miss Dunne's pristine languor, Miss Wyman is, as usual, refreshingly believable throughout. And playing his first major role, the strapping, manly Mr. Hudson gives a fine, direct account of himself, in the film's only real surprise. Otherwise, Universal has delivered the goods—or good—exactly as prescribed by the doctor.
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 | All My Children, WRCW Interview with Palmer
Tags: All, Children, Cynthia, My, Palmer
Description: Palmer endorses the shady Judge Martel who is running for Governor. (Palmer doesn't know he's a crook)! Jane Elliot portrays his wife Cynthia!
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 | James III and the Puritan: Crippled Disco: Stage Invasions
Tags: cheese, Crippled, Disco, electro, Garrad, III, James, london, Macbeth, Machine, Michael, noise, punk, Soft
Description: James III and the Puritan, playing live at Crippled Disco, at the Macbeth (09-06-07). Whilst attempting a cover version of Soft Machine's "Why are we sleeping", and assuming that everyone knew the words, A stage invasion ensued led by the riot leading of Michael "Fucking" Garrad. The video footage cuts out just before the bottles started flying and blood was drawn.Filmed by Jane Palmer on her phone.
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 | Today 1984 Intro
Tags: 1980s, 1984, 80s, Bryant, Gumbel, Jane, Johm, Mid-80s, NBC, Palmer, Pauley, Show, Today
Description: This Is Video #101, Leisurely Open To The Show From The Day After Thanksgiving. November 23, 1984. Bryant Has The Day Off, So John Palmer Fills The Chair Next To Jane Pauley.
This Clip (C)1984 National Broadcasting Company, Inc.
Source 80stvthemes.com
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