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  1. 7 de sept. de 1994 · From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dennis Morgan (born Earl Stanley Morner, December 20, 1908 – September 7, 1994) was an American actor-singer. He used the acting pseudonym Richard Stanley before adopting the name under which he gained his greatest fame. Morgan started working at MGM as Stanley Morner. His best roles were in Mama Steps Out (1937) and Song of the City (1937), but he ...

  2. 9 de sept. de 1994 · Dennis Morgan, the singer and leading man who played opposite Bette Davis, Barbara Stanwyck, Ginger Rogers and other stars of the 1940s, has died.

  3. The Desert Song (1946 Studio Recording). Music by Sigmund Romberg and book and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II, Otto Harbach and Frank Mandel. Orchestra condu...

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    • BlondieJohnson
  4. Dennis Morgan (1908 - 1994) fue un actor de Estados Unidos conocido por Como ella sola, Espejismo de amor, Cena de Navidad, Capitanes de las nubes, La perla del sur del Pacífico, El rifle que conquistó el Oeste, Una mujer peligrosa, Cheyenne, El amor no puede esperar y El regreso del Doctor X

  5. Dennis Morgan had worked on the stage and in radio as an actor and singer before he moved to Hollywood in the mid-'30s. First as Stanley Morner then Richard Stanley, he made several films, singing in Suzy, a starring vehicle for Jean Harlow and Cary Grant, and The Great Ziegfeld (both 1936), although dubbed in the latter by Allan Jones.

  6. Though Dennis Morgan would later allude to Milwaukee, Wisconsin as his hometown, he was actually born in the small burg of Prentice. After attending Carroll College in nearby Waukesha, Morgan acted in stock companies, worked as a radio announcer, and sang with travelling opera troupes. Still using his given name of Stanley Morner, he was signed ...

  7. Dennis Morgan as visiting Steve has just finished serenading dude ranch owner Joan (Dorothy Malone) and they retire to join roommates (Jack Carson as animal-phobic Danny, Penny Edwards as Maggie), for a clever bit directed by David Butler from the script by I.A.L Diamond and Allan Boretz for Warner Bros., in Two Guys From Texas, 1948.