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  1. Production company. Charles Fries Productions. Original release. Network. CBS. Release. September 28, 1983. ( 1983-09-28) Dempsey is a 1983 television film based on the life of the heavyweight boxer Jack Dempsey that starred Treat Williams and Sally Kellerman.

  2. Charles Carpenter Fries (November 29, 1887 – December 8, 1967) was an American linguist and language teacher. Fries is considered the creator of the Aural-Oral method (also erroneously called the Audio-Lingual method). He believed, along with Robert Lado, that language teaching and learning should be approached in a scientific way.

  3. Charles M. Fries. Producer: American Flag. Charles M. Fries was born on August 6, 1952 and is the eldest of seven siblings. Fries is a graduate of Occidental College where he majored in Economics and Philosophy, graduating in 1974 with honors.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › K-9000K-9000 - Wikipedia

    K-9000. K-9000 is a 1991 American science fiction crime action television film starring Chris Mulkey, Catherine Oxenberg, Dennis Haysbert, and Judson Scott. It is the second installment in the K-9 film series, originally intended to serve as a pilot episode for a television series that was based on and serves as a spin-off of K-9.

  5. December 17, 1978. ( 1978-12-17) The Winds of Kitty Hawk is a 1978 American made-for-television biographical film directed by E. W. Swackhamer about the Wright brothers and their invention of the first successful powered heavier-than-air flying machine, the Wright Flyer. [1] It's a tribute to the brothers and was broadcast on December 17, 1978 ...

  6. Original release. Network. PBS. Release. March 22, 1983. ( 1983-03-22) For Us the Living: The Medgar Evers Story is a 1983 American made-for-television biographical film based on the 1967 book, For Us, the Living, by Myrlie Evers-Williams and William Peters. [1] It was broadcast on the PBS television program American Playhouse on March 22, 1983.

  7. Release. November 15, 1980. ( 1980-11-15) High Noon, Part II: The Return of Will Kane is a 1980 American Western television film and a sequel to the classic 1952 film High Noon. It starred Lee Majors in the title role, as well as David Carradine and Pernell Roberts. It first aired on CBS on November 15, 1980, in a two-hour time-slot.