DIVIDEND NEWS
Date: 27 March 1940
Austin Campbell Pendleton (born March 27, 1940) is an American actor, playwright, and theatre director.
Pendleton is known as a prolific character actor on the stage and screen, whose six-decade career has included roles in films including Catch-22 (1970); What's Up, Doc? (1972); The Front Page (1974); The Muppet Movie (1979), Short Circuit (1986); Mr. & Mrs. Bridge (1990); My Cousin Vinny (1992); Mr. Nanny (1993); Guarding Tess (1994); Amistad (1997); A Beautiful Mind (2001), which earned him a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture nomination; and Finding Nemo (2003).
Pendleton received a Tony Award nomination for Best Direction of a Play for the Broadway revival of The Little Foxes in 1981, starring Elizabeth Taylor. He received Obie and Drama Desk Awards for Outstanding Performance in The Last Sweet Days of Isaac in 1970, and an additional Special Drama Desk Award for being a "Renaissance Man of the American Theatre" in 2007. He received an additional Obie Award for directing the Off-Broadway revival of Three Sisters in 2011.
Pendleton's recent Broadway credits include acting in Choir Boy in 2016 and The Minutes in 2022, and directing Between Riverside and Crazy, also in 2022.
Bővebben...A 1940. március 27. egy szerda volt a ♈ csillagjegy alatt. Ez volt az év 86 napja. Az Egyesült Államok elnöke Franklin D. Roosevelt volt.
Ha ezen a napon születtél, akkor 86 éves vagy. Az utolsó születésnapod 2026. március 27., péntek, 79 napja volt. A következő születésnapod 2027. március 27., szombat napon lesz, 285 nap múlva. 31 490 napot élt, vagy körülbelül 755 783 órát, vagy körülbelül 45 346 989 percet vagy körülbelül 2 720 819 340 másodpercet.
Date: 27 March 1940
By DOUGLAS W. CHURCHILL Special to THE NEW YORK TIMES
Douglas CHURCHILL
Date: 28 March 1940
Date: 28 March 1940
Wireless to The New York Times
Date: 27 March 1940
Wireless to THE NEW YORK TIMES
Date: 27 March 1940
Times Wide World
Times World
Date: 28 March 1940
By DOUGLAS W. CHURCHILL Special to THE NEW YORK TIMES
Douglas CHURCHILL