Given how easily the original question was answered, this turned out to be a fascinating investigation and a really good read. Thanks!
You're welcome!Given how easily the original question was answered, this turned out to be a fascinating investigation and a really good read. Thanks!
Given how easily the original question was answered, this turned out to be a fascinating investigation and a really good read. Thanks!
Yep. And, as is our wont, we don't ignore evidence that is inconvenient; we go "how does this affect the conclusions we're reached?" and adjust as necessary.Hey, thank you!
As is often the case, every time @Maurice and I thought this was done we'd uncover a new piece of information that provided more context (and, sometimes, complicated the narrative).
Yep. And, as is our wont, we don't ignore evidence that is inconvenient; we go "how does this affect the conclusions we're reached?" and adjust as necessary.
Mark Altman tweeted that he has a key person from TWOK on record for his 1982 Sci-Fi films film saying she turned down the role because of health reasons, but of course didn't say who it was. He tried suggested we made an "assumption", whereas what we did was make a "deduction" based on the available evidence. As ever, we're interested in getting to the truth so we'll happily review what his source has to say when it eventually surfaces and include it in the piece.
You should have a gold medal sir.I have the 1961 Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea feature on 16mm reels so sure, it's possible. A local tv station probably tossed it and fruitful dumpster diving eventually got it to me.
I blame Squarespace. It's "easy" to use (ha!) but it has some clumsy limitations on formatting that make pages less than "responsive" when going to some screen factors. Trying to reproduce the script formatting even using markdown language yields imperfect results. My apologies.When I read the article on my phone a couple of hours ago the excerpts and citations didn't line break properly, Chrome on Android.
I blame Squarespace. It's "easy" to use (ha!) but it has some clumsy limitations on formatting that make pages less than "responsive" when going to some screen factors. Trying to reproduce the script formatting even using markdown language yields imperfect results. My apologies.
You're welcome.It's a great article, Maurice. Thank you!
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