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Steve McQueen, although he became one of the most influential actors in Hollywood history, had limited awards. However, ...
12/17/2025

Steve McQueen, although he became one of the most influential actors in Hollywood history, had limited awards. However, his work has always received attention and love from audiences and art critics.

Cybill Shepherd and Martin Scorsese in the set of Taxi Driver, 1976 ❤️
12/17/2025

Cybill Shepherd and Martin Scorsese in the set of Taxi Driver, 1976 ❤️

Milla Jovovich ❤️
12/17/2025

Milla Jovovich ❤️

Paul Henreid in Night Train To Munich 1940, directed by Carol Reed. Anna Bomasch (Margaret Lockwood) is a Czech industri...
12/17/2025

Paul Henreid in Night Train To Munich 1940, directed by Carol Reed. Anna Bomasch (Margaret Lockwood) is a Czech industrialist's daughter being used by Gestapo Agent Marsen (Paul Henreid), who is looking for her father. British Agent Dickie Randall (Sir Rex Harrison) poses as a German army officer to aid the Bomasches' escape.

1923 | A Polish Jewish woman, Chawa Rosenfarb, was born in Łódź.A Yiddish writer in the post-war period, award-winning a...
12/17/2025

1923 | A Polish Jewish woman, Chawa Rosenfarb, was born in Łódź.

A Yiddish writer in the post-war period, award-winning author of novels, short stories, poems, plays, and articles whose themes relate to her experiences as a Holocaust survivor.

The Rosenfarb family spent the war in the Litzmannstadt ghetto. It was then that Chava began to write poems inspired by the trauma of life in the closed-off district.

Just before the liquidation of the ghetto, Chava, together with her sister and parents, S.B. Szajewicz, the family of her future husband Henech Morgentaler, and her friend Zenia Marcikowska, hid in a disguised bedroom in the Rozenfarbs' flat. The hideout was discovered on 23 August 1944 and all its occupants were sent to the German N**i camp Auschwitz. There, Chava saw her father and Szajewicz for the last time – they were to be sent to the Dachau camp after selection. On the same day, she also lost her literary output hidden in a rucksack she was carrying with her. She decided then that if she survived, she would write a novel about the Litzmannstadt ghetto.

In the last months of the war, all three women were imprisoned in the N**i German camp Bergen-Belsen, where they lived to see liberation on 15 April 1945. See less

Steven Terrence "Steve" McQueen (born March 24, 1930 in Beech Grove, Marion County, Indiana; † November 7, 1980) was an ...
12/17/2025

Steven Terrence "Steve" McQueen (born March 24, 1930 in Beech Grove, Marion County, Indiana; † November 7, 1980) was an American film and television actor. He was one of the most popular film actors in the USA in the 1960s and 1970s and appeared in westerns such as The Magnificent Seven, but also in adventure (Papillon) and action films (Bullitt, Getaway). He was also passionate about motorcycle and car racing.

1942 A Polish friar, a michalite, Wojciech Nierychlewski CSMA perished in historical. In Kraków he was in charge of the ...
12/16/2025

1942 A Polish friar, a michalite, Wojciech Nierychlewski CSMA perished in historical. In Kraków he was in charge of the publishing and printing house.
In the camp from 10 January 1942.
No. 25468
On the day of his death, the SS forced him to take a "bath": he was washed in cold water, chased naked through the snow, forced into hot shower & poured over with icy water. It repeated several times. Some sources say that he was drowned, other that he was finally shot by the SS

During the Holocaust, Polish doctor Eugene Lazowski carried out a remarkable act of resistance and compassion. Using his...
12/16/2025

During the Holocaust, Polish doctor Eugene Lazowski carried out a remarkable act of resistance and compassion. Using his medical expertise, he injected thousands of Jews with dead typhus bacteria, which caused them to test positive for the disease without actually being infected. This clever deception created the illusion of a typhus outbreak in the region.

Fearing the spread of the disease, N**i authorities avoided entering the area and refrained from deporting those who tested positive. As a result, approximately 8,000 Jewish lives were spared from being sent to concentration camps. Lazowski’s strategy relied on exploiting the occupiers’ fear of epidemics to protect innocent people.

His actions are now remembered as a powerful example of how courage and ingenuity can defy oppression. By turning a medical diagnosis into a shield, Lazowski not only saved lives but also demonstrated the quiet heroism that flourished even in the darkest chapters of history. See less

In December 1943, during the height of World War II, a heavily damaged American B-17 bomber struggled through the skies ...
12/16/2025

In December 1943, during the height of World War II, a heavily damaged American B-17 bomber struggled through the skies over Germany. The aircraft, piloted by young Lieutenant Charles Brown, had been ripped apart by relentless enemy fire. Anti-aircraft guns and German fighter planes had left it in ruins—engines failing, fuselage torn open, and crew members either killed or severely wounded. The bomber staggered forward like a dying bird, barely staying airborne. The mission had turned into a nightmare, and survival seemed impossible.

Suddenly, out of the cold horizon appeared a new threat—a German Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighter, flown by ace pilot Franz Stigler. With dozens of kills to his name, Stigler needed just one more to earn Hitler’s highest military honor. He approached the crippled B-17, ready to finish the job. But as he drew closer and peered into the bomber, he saw something that changed everything: the haunted faces of injured men, streaks of blood on shattered glass, and a plane that could barely fly. In that moment, Stigler chose compassion over duty. He saw not enemies, but fellow human beings on the brink of death.

Instead of firing, Stigler flew alongside the B-17, wingtip to wingtip, shielding it from further attack. He gestured to Brown to continue flying and silently escorted the bomber through dangerous German airspace, protecting it from ground defenses. Once they reached the North Sea—safe airspace for Allied forces—Stigler saluted and turned away. Brown never forgot the mercy shown to him that day. Decades later, in the 1990s, after a long search, the two men met again—not as soldiers, but as brothers. Their bond lasted until they died in 2008, just months apart. Their story remains a testament to the power of conscience and humanity in the darkest of times. See less

He was barely more than a boy, yet the frontier had already carved him into something harder. Clad in buckskin and armed...
12/16/2025

He was barely more than a boy, yet the frontier had already carved him into something harder. Clad in buckskin and armed with a C**t revolver, a bowie knife, and a heavy sidehammer shotgun, he carried the tools of survival that made the difference between a grave on the prairie and another sunrise. The photo, likely taken on the Northern Plains in the late 1860s or early 1870s, captured not just a young man but a way of life — one where every shadow could hold a raider, and every trail could end in blood.
The gear hanging at his side tells its own story. Powder flask, knife, and pistol — each piece worn with use, each carried for a reason. He wasn’t dressing for show, but for war with the land and those who contested it. Buffalo still roamed, tribes still fought to defend their homelands, and settlers pressed deeper into the plains. This young frontiersman stood at the edge of all of it, a single figure caught in the storm of history, his fate unknown but his courage plain.
Men like him rarely lived long, but they lived fiercely. Some became scouts, others lawmen or drifters, many simply vanished into the soil beneath their boots. Yet in that frozen moment, preserved by the camera’s glass eye, the young man stares forward as if daring the West to test him. Buckskin-clad, iron-armed, and unflinching — he was one of countless unnamed souls who carried the frontier on their shoulders, never knowing if tomorrow would remember their names. See less

Ralph Waite, the big-hearted patriarch John Walton in the ‘70s Depression-era series “The Waltons,” passed away five yea...
12/15/2025

Ralph Waite, the big-hearted patriarch John Walton in the ‘70s Depression-era series “The Waltons,” passed away five years ago, on Feb. 13, 2014 at age 85 — and one co-star who grew up with him still has vivid memories of the beloved actor.
Kami Cotler, who played Elizabeth Walton, the youngest member of the TV family, enjoyed fame as a child star during her time in the series but has since gone on to pursue a completely different career as an adult. The 53-year-old mother of two has dedicated her life to education, specifically leading charter schools in Los Angeles. And while she’s no longer pursuing acting, Cotler still vividly remembers bringing “The Waltons” to life and befriending Waite along the way.
Cotler spoke to Fox News about her relationship with Waite, how she feels about “The Waltons” today and why she’s passionate about her current role.
Fox News: What was it like working with Ralph Waite?
Kami Cotler: I’m the youngest of all the kids on the show, so my perspective comes from being a little kid. Ralph took his work so seriously. You can see in Ralph’s performances, the way he prepared, the way that he directed — this was not a game we were playing. There was something really artful and serious going on.
Ralph was also very passionate about politics, how people were treated and social justice. So as a little kid, most of that stuff goes right by you. But I was able to get a glimpse of things. For example, one time he advocated very strongly about casting because there were certain parts that called for Native Americans. And the production company wasn’t planning on casting Native Americans. He stood up and said, "No, these are parts for native people and it’s wrong to cast any other person in them."
Fox News: What’s one memory of Waite that still resonates with you?
Cotler: His singing. Ralph was a terrible singer. But he always did it with enormous gusto nonetheless. Acting on a TV show can be quite dull. There’s a lot of sitting around and waiting. And then suddenly you need to have all of this energy and pretend you’re in the middle of a busy family dinner. During rehearsals, Ralph would just break into Eric Clapton’s "I Shot the Sheriff," which he sang terribly. But it made everybody laugh. He also had some really, really bad jokes. He would tell the same couple of jokes to make everybody laugh. And there was that ridiculous laugh when he was doing something silly like that.
Fox News: Do you remember the last time you spoke to him?
Cotler: Yes, very clearly. This was not long before he passed away. Michael [Learned] organized a dinner for us and we were over at her house. I hadn’t seen Ralph in a while. He lived down in the desert so we didn’t see him as frequently as we saw other members of the cast who lived close by. We were all sitting around Michael’s living room. He went from one to the other, the castmates. He would tell each one of us, "How are you? Are you OK?" And it wasn’t like a casual "Hey, how ya doing?” It was really intent and him wanting to be sure that we were all good in our lives. That we were happy and situated. And it wasn’t until after he passed away that I thought, "He was checking in. He was making sure everybody was good." Maybe he knew he wasn’t going to be around.
Fox News: What's one scene from the show that still sticks out to you?
Cotler: At the beginning of the show, he was dealing with alcoholism and his challenges within his own family. There was a scene between him and me when Elizabeth’s raccoon dies. And we’re standing by the raccoon’s grave and it’s pouring with pretend rain. Elizabeth asks the question, "Why do the things you love have to die?" Ralph has a lovely response as John Walton. And the way Ralph told the story, he realized he was kneeling in the mud talking to me, that he had a responsibility to raise his children. To be a better father and to help protect them as they navigated through life’s challenges. He didn’t necessarily think at that moment he was doing a very good job. So he did tell that story about how the acting and the pretend moment really informed his own choices in his real life with his actual children.
Fox News: Looking back, how did he feel about "The Waltons" after it came to an end?
Cotler: He said something really interesting about it. I think he said it at a wedding. It was one of our weddings – I can’t remember who it was – but he got up and said normally as an actor, we get together with a group of people, you create an ensemble, you have this very intense personal experience for a matter of weeks, and then you all go your separate ways. And that’s the normal part of being an actor. Intense togetherness and then moving on to the next thing.
And he said he sort of expected how "The Waltons" would be. But he realized that, as he looked at each of us as we sat in the audience, that he still felt connected. And that the bonds we created in this fictional family were family-like connections. And that we were basically part of each other’s lives whether we wanted it or not. And I think just acknowledging how unique our experience was and how enduring it was for each other.
Fox News: Why does the show continue to resonate with audiences?
Cotler: It represents a side of American life that isn’t often represented, which is a big, working-class family living in a rural place. You don’t see those elements on television very often. And there were lots of writers writing from personal experiences. They were writing about their own upbringings in Kentucky, Tennessee or Virginia. These were people sharing their own stories of being part of a struggling family or living in a rural place. The writers definitely had good stories to tell. And I think we were very fortunate in having the actors that we had. They’re all phenomenally talented and managed to establish something that made it easy for all these children acting along with them to do a good job and to make it real.
Fox News: You had the chance to meet Natalie Wood. What was she like?
Cotler: I knew who Natalie Wood was because my father was in love with Natalie Wood. She was his favorite. We were at some awards show and I just walked right up to her. I was probably 7. And I said, "My daddy is in love with you." I think I was giving away cocktail umbrellas that I had stolen from everybody’s glasses and giving them out to people I wanted to meet. She just pulled me into her lap. I sat and chatted with her until I was ready to move on to the next person.
Fox News: Is it true you’re a school principal now?
Cotler: I’m not at the very moment a school principal. After the show ended, I went off to college and got my teaching credentials. And then I taught for a number of years. Then I helped launch a charter school in Los Angeles, which is how I ended up as a school leader. And then I opened up another middle school in LA where I was a principal for four, five years. … We have three charter schools in LA. Environmental charter schools. And I basically support all three site leaders with whatever comes up. … I help troubleshoot whatever exciting new problems might emerge.
Fox News: Why education?
Cotler: I think acting was a great job for me as a child, but then I also had a very unusual situation in that I was on the same show for years and years. … Then I was doubly blessed because I was working with a really nice group of people. I was always interested in everything that went on on set.
I always wanted to learn how things worked. And everybody was very super gracious about letting this little girl climb all over their equipment and ask 100 questions. So when I went off to college, it seemed like education would be a really good way to learn more about American culture, live in different parts of the country, work with lots of people and be busy in that way, versus being busy on a TV set. And I have to say, opening a charter school is a lot like putting on a show!

Pernell Roberts decided to leave Bonanza to challenge himself as an actor. Lorne Greene encouraged him to stay, saying h...
12/15/2025

Pernell Roberts decided to leave Bonanza to challenge himself as an actor. Lorne Greene encouraged him to stay, saying he would become very wealthy and could even afford to hire a famous playwright like Tennessee Williams. Michael Landon later said that the three remaining stars split the show's earnings three ways instead of four. While Roberts pursued stage roles and later starred in the TV series Trapper John, M.D., Greene, Landon, and Dan Blocker accumulated significant wealth from

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