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Screaming Flea Productions   - Project ID # 47660
Project Type   Episodic Submission Type   SRN
Location   Los Angeles., CA Union   Non-union
Rate/Pay   n/a Release Date   08-01-06
Audition Date   12-31-69 Submission Deadline   08-05-06
Shoot Date   12-31-69    
Casting Category   Episodic TV - Non-Union
Market(s)   Los Angeles, CA

Screaming Flea Productions is for couples in the midst of divorce who are interested in telling their story on television in a new design program. Each episode chronicles the story of one couple’s relationship, each sadly ending in divorce. Our designers split up the household goods and design two brand new homes. At the end of each episode both parties will have a new place to live that is designed to fit their new lifestyle.

This is a self-response notification (SRN).

Role # 1 - Couples Submit yourself for this role
Seeking 1 talent(s) for this role
couples in the midst of divorce who are interested in telling their story on television in a new design program.

Searchable talent specs:
Gender: Male Female
Age: from 18 to 60
Ethnicity: Any -
Hair Color: Any -
Built: Any -


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After college, he moved to New York City, studied drama, did summer stock and made his Broadway debut with the lead in Emlyn Williams' "Morning Star " Atticus Finch earned Peck his final Hollywood honor, placing No " He continued championing liberal causes, producing an anti-Vietnam War film in 1972, "The Trial of the Catonsville Nine," and helped with the successful campaign against the nomination of Robert Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987 " Peck's lanky, gaunt-cheeked good looks, measured speech and courtly demeanor quickly established him as star material when he broke into movies in the 1940s " "It was an honor to know him 1 last week on the American Film Institute's list of top 50 heroes in U S " In Hollywood, he was soon under non-exclusive contracts to four studios; he refused an exclusive pact with MGM despite Louis B Ahab "He was the reigning father of the actor He had a small role in the 1998 TV miniseries "Moby Dick," for example, as a fire-and-brimstone preacher Peck was 87 They had two children, Anthony and Cecilia, both actors Friedman said that over the years Peck told him he knew audiences recalled him most fondly for Atticus, the widowed Southern lawyer raising two children amid racial unrest as he defends an innocent black man against charges of raping a white woman Oscar Winner Gregory Peck Dies at 87 Jun 13, 3:03 AM EST Gregory Peck tried his hand at villainous roles, but he knew he would be best remembered as that most perfect of patriarchs, Atticus Finch After his divorce in 1954, Peck married Veronique Passani, a Paris reporter Peck served as president of the academy from 1967-70, steering the group into the "vigorous agenda of programming, grant support and preservation work that characterize it today," Pierson said Scott Fitzgerald in "Beloved Infidel Mitchum, the vengeful ex-con who terrorized Peck and his family in the original, played a sympathetic policeman in the new version, while Peck played the ex-con's vile lawyer in the remake Douglas MacArthur in "MacArthur," Lincoln in the TV miniseries "The Blue and the Gray" and F "I put everything I had into it â€â€? all my feelings and everything I'd learned in 46 years of living, about family life and fathers and children," Peck said in 1989 It was an honor to have worked with him," DeVito said movies and beating out such dashing figures as Harrison Ford's Indiana Jones and Sean Connery's James Bond He played writer Ambrose Bierce in 1989's "Old Gringo" and the owner of a company targeted for a hostile takeover in the 1991 Danny DeVito comedy "Other People's Money With most male stars absent in the war, studios desperately needed strong leading men He divorced amicably from his first wife and was never touched by scandal " The quiet dignity of his on-screen persona also marked his private life " Other films included Alfred Hitchcock's "Spellbound," the Ernest Hemingway adaptation "The Snows of Kilimanjaro," the corporate-America critique "The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit" and the nuclear-Armageddon tale "On the Beach He taught me chess between scenes Orson Welles had played that role in the 1956 movie version in which Peck starred as Capt "He was gentle, sweet and generous Peck married his first wife, Greta, in 1942 and they had three sons, Jonathan, Stephen and Carey A Roosevelt New Dealer, Peck campaigned for Harry Truman in 1948 "at a time when nobody thought he had a chance to win Peck was exempt from service because of an old back injury He was a complete and total gentleman," said Polly Bergen, who played Peck's wife in "Cape Fear " Among Peck's final roles were playful revisitations of his past films " Roles became scarce late in his career "And my feelings about racial justice and inequality and opportunity He made his film debut in 1944's "Days of Glory," a tale of Russian peasants coping with Nazi occupation Martin Scorsese's 1991 remake of "Cape Fear" cast Peck and Robert Mitchum in a reversal of the good and evil types they played in the 1962 original The actor had not been suffering from any particular ailments, Friedman said, but simply slipped off to sleep and died as his wife held his hand Mayer's tearful pleading Peck's career was defined by that film, said Jack Valenti, head of the Motion Picture Association of America, "because he was the classic, quintessential American hero, a fellow who puts to hazard his whole future in order to do something he believes is right to do Peck, who won the best-actor Academy Award for playing the noble Atticus in 1962's "To Kill a Mockingbird," died Thursday at his Los Angeles home, spokesman Monroe Friedman said The next year, he played a priest in his second film, "Keys of the Kingdom," which brought him his first Oscar nomination Jonathan, a TV reporter, committed suicide at age 30 "His role as Atticus Finch was slightly ironic for those of us who knew him, in that it was a part in which he only had to play himself, not someone else," said Frank Pierson, president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences " But the role of the heavy never quite suited him Three more nominations soon followed: For 1946's "The Yearling," the family classic about a boy and his pet fawn; for 1947's best-picture winner "Gentleman's Agreement," in which Peck played a reporter posing as a Jew to expose anti-Semitism in America; and for 1949's "Twelve O'Clock High," with Peck as a World War II flight leader coming unglued under the pressures of command Late in his career, Peck played such blackhearts as Nazi doctor Josef Mengele in "The Boys From Brazil "He was more than a great man A stage version of "Moby Dick" lured Peck into acting when he was studying English at the University of California at Berkeley " "One of the dearest I've worked with His "legacy not only lies in his films, but in the dignified, decent and moral way in which he worked and lived," said director Steven Spielberg " Peck also played such historical figures as Gen