Please note that the articles about the characters; the names of the actors playing them are given as an additional information and to avoid confusion in some cases.
He is depicted as an everyman who started out by going the distance and overcoming obstacles that had occurred in his life and career as a professional boxer.
In the novel, the character is nicknamed 'Pistols' [last name] and is also called 'Paco' (a Spanish diminutive of [first name]).
Upon his death, Michael, his youngest son, succeeds him as the mafia don of the [last name] crime family.
[Answer] is a 12-year-old girl and the daughter of actress Chris [last name].
[Name] wants to follow in his grandfather's footsteps and live up to the legacy of hunchbacks throughout history who have served the Frankenstein family.
In Network, [name], the anchorman for the UBS Evening News, struggles to accept the ramifications of the social ailments and depravity existing in the world.
The story was later republished in the novel Goodbye to Berlin.
She thwarts the sinister Sith Lord Darth Vader and helps bring about the destruction of the Empire's cataclysmic superweapon, the Death Star.
He is also known from the musical dramatic adaptation of [name] and His Daughters, Fiddler on the Roof.
Ridley Scott, director of the first film in the series, made the decision to switch [name] from the standard male action hero to a heroine.
At the age of seventeen, she has her first menstrual period in the showers at school, awakening her dormant telekinetic and telepathic abilities.
In the television series, [name] was played by actress and singer Linda Lavin.
In the film, however, two newspaper articles print his name as '[name] Burgess'.
[Name] appeared in the first film in the series (1974) and in its six subsequent continuations and remakes.
Although supremely skilled in swordplay, [name] suffers from unchecked overconfidence and a staunch refusal ever to give up.
[Name] was portrayed by Michael Parks in the 1986 sequel The Return of [name].
She is the primary protagonist of the first, second, and seventh and appears at the beginning of the eighth.
The blurb on the paperback on which the original film is based states [name] is 'Hotter than Bond, cooler than Bullitt.'
The character is based on a real-life New York City police detective, Eddie Egan, who also appeared in the film as Walt Simonson, [name]'s supervisor.
Since 1972, [name] has been the subject of films and television series, including remakes and adaptations of Fist of Fury.
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