it sounds like a bad pronunciation of Milwaukee. the show had nothing to do with that city, taking place in Rural surroundings. all Lassie shows ( three different versions) had country-rural, even backwoods setting, with various hazard components such as forest and brush fires, accidents of all types- some pretty fishy, and often showed hunters in an unfavorable light. there was a total absence of light matter in this situation tragedy.
No, I believe he is deceased. Jon Provost, the familiar (Timmy) of the Provost-Lockhart Lassie period, as a flag of convenience the (Provost-Lockhart Lassie) is still alive, as is Miss Lockhart.
Tommy Rettig, as Jeff, was the first owner of Lassie. Jan Clayton played his mother. When he got to old, the story line had Jon Provost cast as being adopted, both by the Martin's and Lassie making the choice to stay with Timmy on the farm. In the original transition, Timmy's mother was played by Cloris Leachman for one eposide. The series with Tommy Rettig was renamed "Jeff's Collie" much later, I guess to separate the two stars. There was also a Canadian "Lassie" series a few years ago with Corey Sevier as Lassie's owner.
Jeff Foxworthy
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Call and response is common not only in Samba music but in many forms of jazz and even popular music. It is when an instrumentalist or singer will play a phrase, and either another member of the band or the audience will repeat that phrase back or at least a variation of the phrase. Check out Cab Calloway's "Minnie the Moocher" from The Blues Brothers Soundtrack and watch his interaction with the audience. Though this isn't Samba music, it's the same idea for call and response. For some call and response where two musicians go back and forth, but vary their responses, check out Béla Fleck and the Flecktones: Live at the Quick. The song "Big Country" has some fantastic call and response between Victor Wooten on bass and Jeff Coffin on sax.
Lassie - 1954 Jeff's Moustache 3-38 was released on: USA: 26 May 1957
No, I believe he is deceased. Jon Provost, the familiar (Timmy) of the Provost-Lockhart Lassie period, as a flag of convenience the (Provost-Lockhart Lassie) is still alive, as is Miss Lockhart.
Tommy Rettig, as Jeff, was the first owner of Lassie. Jan Clayton played his mother. When he got to old, the story line had Jon Provost cast as being adopted, both by the Martin's and Lassie making the choice to stay with Timmy on the farm. In the original transition, Timmy's mother was played by Cloris Leachman for one eposide. The series with Tommy Rettig was renamed "Jeff's Collie" much later, I guess to separate the two stars. There was also a Canadian "Lassie" series a few years ago with Corey Sevier as Lassie's owner.
Jeff Foxworthy
Jeff's Collie was the forerunner to Lassie. There was also Flipper, The Dick Van Dyke Show, Dennis the Menace, and The Brady Bunch.
Sure! Here is a simplified sentence diagram for "Jeff pushed on the button for information": Subject: Jeff Action: pushed Object: button Prepositional phrase: for information
It is spelled EE-AH-KEY and was used as a locating shout between Jeff and pal Porky on the 1954 TV series "Lassie"
Lassie was a Collie dog. Over the lengthy run of the program, which really had three distinct generations. stage one : Jeff Morrow and his Collie, stage II, the best remembered- the June Lockhart-Jon Provost Lassie- Timmie the child character, finally the attempt to transition to a more adult audience with Cory the Forest Ranger- which rapidly degenerated into an Animal survival course, with much sight material- dog"as eye, some good cinematography, but little dialogue. it was better with the Kid character. By its very nature, program did not appeal to adults.
The puppet who says the phrase "Silence! I kill you!" is named Achmed the Dead Terrorist. He is a popular character created and performed by ventriloquist Jeff Dunham.
Jon Provost ( Timmie) and June Lockhart ( Mother, Ruth Martin) are still living at this writing. The father character was rather inept. Not a heavy or stern type, but somewhat naïve and inept, rarely played a pivotal role in this downer farm drama.
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A character, a teen-aged boy (unlike the much younger Timmie of the Provost-Lockhart Lassie familiar to many) called Jeff Morrow. Actor involved was one Tommy Rettig, no longer with us. The few Whitman ( a publisher) novels based on Lassie were tied into this scenario, not the Timmie character. He hailed from a one-parent family,