View allAll Photos Tagged joel

Joel Rosario after winning the Ogden Phipps Stakes during the Belmont Stakes Racing Festival at Saratoga Race Course, Saratoga Springs, New York

Singing and playing in Chester , well worth a mooch , honest !

 

..... Thanks on his behalf for 198 views ..... and even better , got tickets for one of his last gigs prior to going back to OZ ! M

Joel Osteen is the pastor of the Lakewood Church, the largest church in America, and a New York Times best selling author.

 

stevenroddy.com/blog/articles/osteen.html

Joel in the twilight crit a few weeks ago, racing on COURAGE #2, and sporting the new kit.

Billy Joel | MGM Grand Garden Arena | Las Vegas, NV | 02.14.09

Photographer: Tyler Murry

Post Work: Joel Chan

 

Umbrella with a 580ex2 set above pointing on playground triggered by my CANON 7d

  

Today is my birthday i turned the big 20 and life has been just excellent, i been pondering the idea about how im growing up so quick and thinking about all my childhood/ kiddish / teen memories. these photos were shot by :Tyler Murry during my last hr as a teenager (19) its me being a kid at the playground cause u know im the king of it all ;) just realize that even though i might get older im still always be a kid at heart. Life just started :)

 

www.facebook.com/juxtaposedcreations

www.jcgraphicarts.com

Joel showing Hagar how to wash clothes

 

Location: UFRN Macaíba, RN

www.lightinaction.com

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Joel mostrando para a Hagar como lavar as roupas

 

Local: UFRN Macaíba, RN

www.luzemacao.com

Samsung digital camera

folding wip...

 

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due to my short term memory loss(?),

i preserve the steps (i tried to remember how i've folded Owesen's stars the other day... couldn't remember it... what a silly i am)

 

anyway, i asked Joel a permission for this base, what he calls 'hex twists with two opposite pleats reversed, or countersunk' on his herringbone but didn't hear any from him.

recently he post the reverse shot. so i take the liberty to give my note2self to friends in flickr.

hope Joel doesn't feel being handed over by one of his most able students (well, that's me ^L^")

and i hope some friends will bring a nice idea from it as always they do.

Billy Joel performs at the Moda Center in Portland. (Matthew Lamb / MatthewLambPhotography.com)

Joel Rosario at Saratoga Race Course, Saratoga Springs, New York

Unculled photos of Joel Steiner and his date Madison Kolstad getting ready for their 2015 Nixa High School Junior Senior Prom

Joel, Sarah and I went walking around downtown Tacoma for about 3hrs...and this is the only picture to survive the editting floor!

Vintage cut-out card.

 

Joel McCrea (1905-1990) was an American actor whose career spanned 50 years. He was the leading man in three Best Picture Oscar nominees, Dead End (1937), Foreign Correspondent (1940) and The More the Merrier (1943). He starred in more than 80 films and during the 1950s, he became one of the great stars of the American Western.

 

Joel Albert McCrea was born in 1905 in South Pasadena, California. His surname is pronounced "MC-Cray". He was the son of Lou Whipple McCrea, a professional Christian Science practitioner, and Thomas McCrea, an employee of the L.A. Gas & Electric Company. He was the grandson of a western stagecoach driver who had fought against the Apaches. Joel was raised in the surroundings of Hollywood. In his youth, he was a paperboy for the Los Angeles Times, where he came into contact with Cecil B. DeMille and other people in the film industry. He also witnessed the shooting of D.W. Griffith's epic silent film Intolerance (David Wark Griffith, 1916) and had an extra role in a film series with Ruth Roland. Roland's leading man could not ride well. McCrea, an outstanding horseman since he was nine, doubled for the actor at $2.50 a day and was given a job wrangling for the rest of the shoot. He also held horses for Hollywood cowboy stars William S. Hart and Tom Mix. McCrea attended Hollywood High School with future director Jacques Tourneur who would later direct him in Stars in My Crown (1950), Wichita (1955) and Stranger on Horseback (1955). He then studied at Pomona College where he took acting classes. He got some stage experience at the Pasadena Community Playhouse. McCrea worked as an extra, stunt man, and bit player from 1927 to 1928, when he signed a contract with MGM. There he got his first major role in The Jazz Age (Lynn Shores, 1929). His first leading role was in The Silver Horde (George Archainbaud, 1930) as a fisherman torn between two women, played by top-billed Evelyn Brent and Jean Arthur. In 1930, he left for RKO. Will Rogers took a liking to the young man. They shared a love of ranching and roping and Rogers helped elevate McCrea's career. Rogers advised him to put the money he made from acting into real estate, a venture that made the novice actor a millionaire. His wholesome good looks and quiet manner were soon in demand, primarily in romantic dramas and comedies, and he became an increasingly popular leading man. In 1932, McCrea starred with Dolores Del Rio in Bird of Paradise (King Vidor, 1932), which caused controversy because of some nude scenes. That year, he also co-starred with Fay Wray in the Horror film The Most Dangerous Game (Ernest B. Schoedsack, Irving Pichel, 1932). In 1934, he was first seen together with the two actresses he would often work with. With Miriam Hopkins, he appeared in The Richest Girl in the World (William A. Seiter, 1934) and with Barbara Stanwyck, he co-starred in the romantic drama Gambling Lady (Archie Mayo, 1934). In 1937, he starred in the Best Oscar nominee Dead End (William Wyler, 1937) with Humphrey Bogart, and was the first actor to play the role of Dr. Kildare in the film Internes Can't Take Money (Alfred Santell, 1937), with Barbara Stanwyck. He also starred in the Western Wells Fargo (Frank Lloyd, 1937) with his wife Frances Dee. After losing the lead in The Real Glory (Henry Hathaway, 1939) to Gary Cooper, he realised that as long as Samuel Goldwyn had both Cooper and him under contract, he would always come out second in the studio's choice roles. When he refused to re-sign with Goldwyn, the producer warned him that he'd "never work in this town again!" After that, Goldwyn always referred to the actor as "Joel McCreal." McCrea signed with Cecil B. DeMille for Union Pacific (1939) at Paramount.

 

The peak of Joel McCrea's career was in the early 1940s. He starred in such films as Alfred Hitchcock's espionage thriller Foreign Correspondent (1940), George Stevens' romantic comedy The More the Merrier (1943) with Jean Arthur, and two comedy classics by Preston Sturges, Sullivan's Travels (1941) with Veronica Lake, and The Palm Beach Story (1942) with Claudette Colbert. He also starred in two Westerns by William A. Wellman, The Great Man's Lady (1942), again with Barbara Stanwyck, and Buffalo Bill (1944). Jim Beaver at IMDb: "He hoped to concentrate on Westerns, but several years passed before he could convince the studio heads to cast him in one. When he proved successful in that genre, more and more Westerns came his way." After the success of The Virginian (Stuart Gilmore, 1946), McCrea decided to focus entirely on Westerns. The only exceptions were the Film Noir Hollywood Story (William Castle, 1951) and the British spy-thriller Rough Shoot (Robert Parrish, 1953). McCrea played the lead in NBC Radio's Tales from the Texas Rangers from 1950 to 1952. The program was a Western police procedural based on real cases from the Texas Rangers. In 1933, McCrea married actress Frances Dee, whom he had met on the set of The Silver Cord. The couple starred together in five films: The Silver Cord (John Cromwell, 1933), One Man's Journey (John S. Robertson, 1933), Come and Get It (Howard Hawks, William Wyler, 1936), Wells Fargo (Frank Lloyd, 1937), Four Faces West (Alfred E. Green, 1948) and Cattle Drive (Kurt Neumann, 1951). Together they had three children: David, Peter and Jody. Jody followed in his parents' footsteps and also became an actor. McCrea and Dee remained married until McCrea's death. In 1959, McCrea and his son Jody starred together in the TV series Wichita Town. A few years later, McCrea co-starred with fellow Western veteran Randolph Scott in Ride the High Country (Sam Peckinpah, 1962). McCrea made a couple of appearances in small films afterwards but was primarily content to maintain his life as a gentleman rancher. In 1966, he returned with The Young Rounders (Casey Tibbs, 1966). In 1968, McCrea received a career achievement award from the L.A. Film Critics Association. He was also inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, and received two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame; one for his film career, and one for his radio career. His last film was Mustang Country (John C. Champion, 1976). In 1990, McCrea made his last public appearance. He died three weeks later at the age of 84 at the Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, from pneumonia.

 

Sources: Jim Beaver (IMDb), Wikipedia (Dutch and English) and IMDb.

 

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