Tim Gratz Posted December 6, 2005 Share Posted December 6, 2005 Lee signed the ad. The "running man" was, obviously, the man running the operation. Probably not, but . . . Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lee Forman Posted December 6, 2005 Share Posted December 6, 2005 Laurence Harvey, who also played in The Manchurian Candidate. Fernando Rey, who also played in The French Connection. Weird... NOTE RE APPOINTMENT, ANNOUNCED IN THE GAZETA NACIONAL OF CUBA, THAT DR. JUAN ANTONIO RUBIO PADILLA WAS NAMED BY THE CASTRO GOVERNMENT AS COMMERCIAL ATTACHE FOR WORK OVERSEAS. CAST FOR 'Running Man' Laurence Harvey - Rex Black Lee Remick - Stella Black Alan Bates - Stephen Maddox Felix Aylmer - Parson Eleanor Summerfield - Hilda Tanner Allan Cuthbertson - Jenkins Harold Goldblatt - Tom Webster Noel Purcell - Miles Bleeker Ramsay Ames - Madge Penderby Eddie Byrne - Sam Crewdson Colin Gordon - Solicitor John Meillon - Jim Jerome Roger Delgado - Spanish Doctor Antonio Padilla Ruiz Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tim Gratz Posted December 6, 2005 Share Posted December 6, 2005 Interesting, Lee. I too had thought of the movie. Coincidentally or not, it was released in 1963. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pat Speer Posted December 6, 2005 Share Posted December 6, 2005 Interesting, Lee. I too had thought of the movie. Coincidentally or not, it was released in 1963. I'm sure it's a tie-in to the movie. Lee Remick is begging for her "Running Man" to come back. In the movie she plays the wife of Laurence Harvey, who may have inadvertently just played a different Lee in the Manchurian Candidate. He fakes his death in an insurance scam and goes on the run. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
James Richards Posted December 6, 2005 Author Share Posted December 6, 2005 Interesting, Lee. I too had thought of the movie. Coincidentally or not, it was released in 1963. I'm sure it's a tie-in to the movie. Lee Remick is begging for her "Running Man" to come back. In the movie she plays the wife of Laurence Harvey, who may have inadvertently just played a different Lee in the Manchurian Candidate. He fakes his death in an insurance scam and goes on the run. I believe you may well be right, Pat. Strange promotion for the movie though. Not exactly high profile. Bizarre. James Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tim Gratz Posted December 6, 2005 Share Posted December 6, 2005 I too think Pat probably solved the mystery of the ad--IF--similar ads were placed in other cities. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lee Forman Posted December 6, 2005 Share Posted December 6, 2005 Interesting, Lee. I too had thought of the movie. Coincidentally or not, it was released in 1963. I'm sure it's a tie-in to the movie. Lee Remick is begging for her "Running Man" to come back. In the movie she plays the wife of Laurence Harvey, who may have inadvertently just played a different Lee in the Manchurian Candidate. He fakes his death in an insurance scam and goes on the run. Sounds very plausible Pat - but why not use the name 'Stella' in that case? It's not Lee Remick doing the begging, it's her character? - lee Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mark Stapleton Posted July 16, 2006 Share Posted July 16, 2006 Interesting, Lee. I too had thought of the movie. Coincidentally or not, it was released in 1963. I'm sure it's a tie-in to the movie. Lee Remick is begging for her "Running Man" to come back. In the movie she plays the wife of Laurence Harvey, who may have inadvertently just played a different Lee in the Manchurian Candidate. He fakes his death in an insurance scam and goes on the run. Sounds very plausible Pat - but why not use the name 'Stella' in that case? It's not Lee Remick doing the begging, it's her character? - lee Lee submitted his job application with the TSBD on October 15. It was a coded message, sent three days in a row, confirming the patsy was being positioned. IMO, of course. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mark Stapleton Posted July 16, 2006 Share Posted July 16, 2006 (edited) Dropping all the lower case words leaves you with: (October 15); "RUNNING MAN". LEE. (October 16); I WANT "THE RUNNING MAN". LEE. (October 17); I'VE "THE RUNNING MAN". LEE. It's a message. Edited July 16, 2006 by Mark Stapleton Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Shanet Clark Posted July 17, 2006 Share Posted July 17, 2006 Looks like a drop call between LEE (not Lee Remick) and the RUNNING MAN Marathon Man and Telefon spread some light on the Manchurian Candidate theme. Running agents was the job of the LEE here, out in the cold and looking for solace. Looks like a counter counterintelligence scheme, whether real or not. probably false. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dawn Meredith Posted July 17, 2006 Share Posted July 17, 2006 [quote name='James Richards' date='Dec 6 2005, 01:29 AM' post='47477'] In addition to the ad previously posted, here are two more 'Running Man' classifieds. They come from the 16th and 17th of October, 1963. FWIW. James James: FWIW, I think you are onto something here. Does not sound like any movie ad I have ever seen. Sounds more like code. Dawn If WC looked at it, they also covered it up. (after not investigating it, good old FBI) Interesting, Lee. I too had thought of the movie. Coincidentally or not, it was released in 1963. I'm sure it's a tie-in to the movie. Lee Remick is begging for her "Running Man" to come back. In the movie she plays the wife of Laurence Harvey, who may have inadvertently just played a different Lee in the Manchurian Candidate. He fakes his death in an insurance scam and goes on the run. Sounds very plausible Pat - but why not use the name 'Stella' in that case? It's not Lee Remick doing the begging, it's her character? - lee Lee submitted his job application with the TSBD on October 15. It was a coded message, sent three days in a row, confirming the patsy was being positioned. IMO, of course. Mark: As usual, I think you nailed it!!! Well done, mate. Dawn (playing catch up here... saw Shanet's name as last post so knew it had to be of interest!! Glad to see ya back Shan). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mark Stapleton Posted July 17, 2006 Share Posted July 17, 2006 [quote name='James Richards' date='Dec 6 2005, 01:29 AM' post='47477'] In addition to the ad previously posted, here are two more 'Running Man' classifieds. They come from the 16th and 17th of October, 1963. FWIW. James James: FWIW, I think you are onto something here. Does not sound like any movie ad I have ever seen. Sounds more like code. Dawn If WC looked at it, they also covered it up. (after not investigating it, good old FBI) Interesting, Lee. I too had thought of the movie. Coincidentally or not, it was released in 1963. I'm sure it's a tie-in to the movie. Lee Remick is begging for her "Running Man" to come back. In the movie she plays the wife of Laurence Harvey, who may have inadvertently just played a different Lee in the Manchurian Candidate. He fakes his death in an insurance scam and goes on the run. Sounds very plausible Pat - but why not use the name 'Stella' in that case? It's not Lee Remick doing the begging, it's her character? - lee Lee submitted his job application with the TSBD on October 15. It was a coded message, sent three days in a row, confirming the patsy was being positioned. IMO, of course. Mark: As usual, I think you nailed it!!! Well done, mate. Dawn (playing catch up here... saw Shanet's name as last post so knew it had to be of interest!! Glad to see ya back Shan). Hi Dawn, Yes, I think it is definitely a message pertaining to LHO, 'running man' meaning patsy, of course. Checking if similar classified ads were placed in newspapers in other US cities at the same time could disprove the idea--as Tim suggested in post #21--or it could turn out quite interesting. Has anyone got some time to spare? James, which newspaper are the ads from? Is it possible they would still have the records of those who placed advertisments in the classifieds? It might not necessarliy lead anywhere but discovering who placed those ads would be intriguing. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
James Richards Posted July 17, 2006 Author Share Posted July 17, 2006 James, which newspaper are the ads from? Is it possible they would still have the records of those who placed advertisments in the classifieds? It might not necessarliy lead anywhere but discovering who placed those ads would be intriguing. (Mark Stapleton) Mark, The ads I posted came from the Dallas Morning News. Cheers, James Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Robert Howard Posted July 17, 2006 Share Posted July 17, 2006 James, which newspaper are the ads from? Is it possible they would still have the records of those who placed advertisments in the classifieds? It might not necessarliy lead anywhere but discovering who placed those ads would be intriguing. (Mark Stapleton)Mark, The ads I posted came from the Dallas Morning News. Cheers, James I recently spoke with an individual who would know, who stated that the Dallas Police Department had investigated the classified advertisement's for 'Running Man, please contact me LEE.' Apparently, the classified ad had been noted by the FBI [ie J. Edgar Hoover] as well. This is what I was told. "The ad's were placed not only in the Dallas Morning News, but in the Dallas Times Herald on the same day's as they ran in the Dallas Morning News. The ad's were placed by the owner or manager of the Capri Theater in Dallas, as a promotion for the movie 'The Running Man.'" Substaniating this, is the fact that by October 20, 1963 the film 'The Running Man' starring Laurence Harvey, Lee Remick and Alan Bates does indeed appear on the marquee listings as showing at the Capri Theater in Dallas, Texas. This information is not intended to dissuade any further research on the subject, but is simply intended as a FYI to all who have an interest./Robert Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mark Stapleton Posted July 18, 2006 Share Posted July 18, 2006 James, which newspaper are the ads from? Is it possible they would still have the records of those who placed advertisments in the classifieds? It might not necessarliy lead anywhere but discovering who placed those ads would be intriguing. (Mark Stapleton) Mark, The ads I posted came from the Dallas Morning News. Cheers, James I recently spoke with an individual who would know, who stated that the Dallas Police Department had investigated the classified advertisement's for 'Running Man, please contact me LEE.' Apparently, the classified ad had been noted by the FBI [ie J. Edgar Hoover] as well. This is what I was told. "The ad's were placed not only in the Dallas Morning News, but in the Dallas Times Herald on the same day's as they ran in the Dallas Morning News. The ad's were placed by the owner or manager of the Capri Theater in Dallas, as a promotion for the movie 'The Running Man.'" Substaniating this, is the fact that by October 20, 1963 the film 'The Running Man' starring Laurence Harvey, Lee Remick and Alan Bates does indeed appear on the marquee listings as showing at the Capri Theater in Dallas, Texas. This information is not intended to dissuade any further research on the subject, but is simply intended as a FYI to all who have an interest./Robert Robert, Thanks for that info. The fact that the DPD investigated the ads and accepted the explanation given doesn't mitigate the ads suspicious nature, IMO. The DPD has zero credibility in matters relating to JFK, and the benefit of the doubt can never be given to them, IMO. If I ran a theatre in Dallas, I would advertise coming attractions in bold type---prominently and loudly. I wouldn't disguise the ads as cryptic puzzles, then bury them deep within the classified section. That makes no sense. It seems a bit too subliminal and sophisticated to have been used as an advertising technique in Dallas in 1963. The explanation sounds false, and as Lee Forman pointed out, why use the name 'Lee' instead of the film character's actual name, 'Stella'? IMO, it's a coded message from a participant in the conspiracy, signalling that the patsy had been manipulated into place and giving the all clear for the plan to proceed. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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