Dangerous Assignment: The Atomic-Mine Story


04:00 am - 04:30 am, Saturday, November 22 on KTVP Nostalgia Network (23.6)

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About this Broadcast
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The Atomic-Mine Story

Season 1, Episode 24

Armed with a Geiger counter, Steve (Brian Donlevy) seeks a bomb-carrying killer aboard a speeding train. Minette: Laura Mason. Menton: Herb Deans. Claudine: Celeste Clark. Mme. Berlot: Marcelle Corday. Tim: Bill Tannen. Manter: Roland Varno.

repeat 1952 English HD Level Unknown
Crime Drama Espionage

Cast & Crew
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Brian Donlevy (Actor) .. Steve
Laura Mason (Actor) .. Minette
Celeste Clark (Actor) .. Claudine
Herb Deans (Actor) .. Menton
Marcelle Corday (Actor) .. Mme. Berlot
Bill Tannen (Actor) .. Tim
Roland Varno (Actor) .. Manter

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Brian Donlevy (Actor) .. Steve
Born: February 09, 1889
Died: April 05, 1972
Trivia: The son of an Irish whiskey distiller, Brian Donlevy was 10 months old when his family moved to Wisconsin. At 15, Donlevy ran away from home, hoping to join General Pershing's purge against Mexico's Pancho Villa. His tenure below the border was brief, and within a few months he was enrolled in military school. While training to be a pilot at the U.S. Naval Academy, Donlevy developed an interest in amateur theatricals. He spent much of the early 1920s living by his wits in New York, scouting about for acting jobs and attempting to sell his poetry and other writings. He posed for at least one Arrow Collar ad and did bit and extra work in several New York-based films, then received his first break with a good supporting role in the 1924 Broadway hit What Price Glory?. Several more Broadway plays followed, then in 1935 Donlevy decided to try his luck in Hollywood. A frustrated Donlevy was prepared to head back to Manhattan when, at the last minute, he was cast as a villain in Sam Goldwyn's Barbary Coast. In 1936 he was signed to a 20th Century-Fox contract, alternating between "B"-picture heroes and "A"-picture heavies for the next few years. The most notable of his bad-guy roles from this period was the cruel but courageous Sgt. Markoff in Beau Geste (1939); reportedly, Donlevy deliberately behaved atrociously off-camera as well as on, so that his co-workers would come to genuinely despise his character. From 1940 through 1946, Donlevy was most closely associated with Paramount Pictures, delivering first-rate performances in such films as The Great McGinty (1940), Wake Island (1942), The Glass Key (1942) and The Virginian (1946). His own favorite role was that of the good-hearted, raffish con-artist in Universal's Nightmare (1942). In 1950, Donlevy took time off from films to star and co-produce the syndicated radio (and later TV) series Dangerous Assignment. He went on to introduce the character of Dr. Quatermass in two well-received British science fiction films, The Creeping Unknown (1955) and Enemy From Space (1957). Brian Donlevy left behind an impressive enough filmic legacy to put the lie to his own assessment of his talents: "I think I stink."
Laura Mason (Actor) .. Minette
Celeste Clark (Actor) .. Claudine
Herb Deans (Actor) .. Menton
Marcelle Corday (Actor) .. Mme. Berlot
Born: January 08, 1890
Bill Tannen (Actor) .. Tim
Born: August 31, 1942
Roland Varno (Actor) .. Manter
Born: March 15, 1908
Trivia: Holland-born character actor Roland Varno's best-known film role was also his first one in the German classic Der Blaue Engle (1930), which starred German sensation Marlene Dietrich. Afterwards, Varno went to Hollywood and appeared with some of the town's best actresses, including Katharine Hepburn. Varno was fluent in several languages and during WWII, he was placed in the Office of Strategic Services and appeared in several propaganda movies, including Hitler's Children. His linguistic versatility came in handy after the war and made him a popular radio performer in radio programs across the country. He made his last movie appearance in Istanbul (1957). Several years into his retirement, Varno's language skills again came in handy on the set of the highly touted miniseries War and Remembrance (1988).

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