So true! I just proved it a bit ago. The television program where James Drury portrayed Jesse James, Jr., was on Playhouse 90 in 1958. Frank was portrayed by Francot Tone and not Victor Jory.
Takes a brave and humble man to admit an error in judgement on his part. All too often, we make an assertion and then carve it in stone. But Stan zeroed in on the frailties of the human psyche showing how vulnerable even the toughest men could be.
I think it was St. Paul who confessed, “The good that I would do, I do not. But the evil I would not do, that I do.” Something like that. Proves we’re human.
So true! I just proved it a bit ago. The television program where James Drury portrayed Jesse James, Jr., was on Playhouse 90 in 1958. Frank was portrayed by Francot Tone and not Victor Jory.
Thanks, Margaret-Anne. Keeps us on our toes,I guess, not taking anything we know for granted. Because—maybe we
DON’T really know what we know.
Takes a brave and humble man to admit an error in judgement on his part. All too often, we make an assertion and then carve it in stone. But Stan zeroed in on the frailties of the human psyche showing how vulnerable even the toughest men could be.
I think it was St. Paul who confessed, “The good that I would do, I do not. But the evil I would not do, that I do.” Something like that. Proves we’re human.