Bill Layne is a Actor and Background Designer American born on 25 march 1911
Bill Layne
Bill Layne participated to
4 films (as actor, director or script writer).
Among those,
2 have good markets following the box office.
Here are the best films classified by number of entries :
Art
, 1h18
Directed by Wolfgang ReithermanOrigin USAGenres Comedy,
Musical theatre,
Adventure,
Musical,
AnimationThemes Films about animals,
Films about children,
Le thème de l'enfant sauvage,
Films about music and musicians,
Film d'animation mettant en scène un animal,
Wolves in film,
Mise en scène d'un ours,
Films about apes,
Mise en scène d'un tigre,
L'enfance marginalisée,
Musical films,
Buddy films,
Children's films,
Mise en scène d'un mammifèreActors Bruce Reitherman,
Phil Harris,
Louis Prima,
George Sanders,
Sterling Holloway,
Sebastian CabotRoles Background Designer
Rating75%
Mowgli, a young orphan boy, is found in a basket in the deep jungles of India by Bagheera, a black panther who promptly takes him to a mother wolf who has just had cubs. She raises him along with her own cubs and Mowgli soon becomes well acquainted with jungle life. Mowgli is shown ten years later, playing with his wolf siblings., 2h19
Directed by Robert Stevenson,
Joseph L. McEveety,
Tom Leetch,
Arthur J. VitarelliOrigin USAGenres Comedy,
Fantasy,
MusicalThemes Films about animals,
Films about children,
Films about families,
Films about music and musicians,
Films about birds,
Musical films,
Films about penguins,
Children's filmsActors Julie Andrews,
Dick Van Dyke,
David Tomlinson,
Glynis Johns,
Karen Dotrice,
Matthew GarberRoles Background Designer
Rating77%
In Edwardian London, 1910, Cockney one-man band Bert is entertaining a crowd when he senses a change in the wind. Afterwards, he directly addresses the audience and gives them a tour of Cherry Tree Lane, stopping outside the home of the Banks'. George Banks returns home from his job at the bank to learn from his wife Winifred that their hired nanny, Katie Nanna, has left their service after his children, Jane and Michael, ran away again. They are returned shortly after by the local constable, who reveals that the children were dragged away by their kite. The children ask their father to help build a better kite, but he dismisses them. Taking it upon himself to hire a nanny, George advertises for a stern, no-nonsense nanny. Jane and Michael present their own advertisement for a kinder, sweeter nanny, but George rips up the letter and throws the scraps in the fireplace, which magically float up and out into the air.