The End Is But the Beginning

The End Is But the Beginning
The End Is But the Beginning
1965
TV Episode
51m
Kimble picks up a hitchhiker who then dies in a truck accident. Kimble hopes that the body will be identified as his and then end once and for all Lt. Gerard's pursuit of him.
Directed by:
Walter GraumanWriters:
Arthur Weiss, George FassStarring:
Barbara Barrie, Barry Morse, Frank Maxwell, William Conrad, Andrew Duggan, David JanssenDavid Janssen was born to be a TV star. The Janssen family settled in Hollywood when he was a teenager and he attended Fairfax High School, where he developed an interest in acting. His film debut was a bit part in It's a Pleasure (1945), and at the age of 18 signed a contract with 20th Century-Fox. However, the studio dropped him after allegedly becoming disenchanted with his odd hairline and big prominent ears. Janssen had better luck at Universal, where he signed on in the early 1950s and bec
Orangey the Cat is the only feline double-winner of the Patsy Award, the animal kingdom's equivalent of the Oscar. Orangey won his first Patsy for his cinema debut in Rhubarb, ten years later, he won his second Patsy, playing "Cat" in Breakfast at Tiffany's.Orangey, who sometimes was billed as Rhubarb the Cat, was an orange-colored tabby trained by the famous animal trainer Frank Inn, known for famous critter thespians.
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Cast & Info
Directed by:
Walter GraumanWriters:
Arthur Weiss, George FassStarring:
Barbara Barrie, Barry Morse, Frank Maxwell, William Conrad, Andrew Duggan, David JanssenDavid Janssen was born to be a TV star. The Janssen family settled in Hollywood when he was a teenager and he attended Fairfax High School, where he developed an interest in acting. His film debut was a bit part in It's a Pleasure (1945), and at the age of 18 signed a contract with 20th Century-Fox. However, the studio dropped him after allegedly becoming disenchanted with his odd hairline and big prominent ears. Janssen had better luck at Universal, where he signed on in the early 1950s and bec
Orangey the Cat is the only feline double-winner of the Patsy Award, the animal kingdom's equivalent of the Oscar. Orangey won his first Patsy for his cinema debut in Rhubarb, ten years later, he won his second Patsy, playing "Cat" in Breakfast at Tiffany's.Orangey, who sometimes was billed as Rhubarb the Cat, was an orange-colored tabby trained by the famous animal trainer Frank Inn, known for famous critter thespians.
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