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36 Sentences With "sudden fear"

How to use sudden fear in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "sudden fear" and check conjugation/comparative form for "sudden fear". Mastering all the usages of "sudden fear" from sentence examples published by news publications.

He unscrews the lid partially, caught by a sudden fear.
We will stop now to beat back our sudden fear that our president will not know what country he's in.
Sudden fear or anger can lead to a sudden release of adrenaline that may increase the heart rate and blood pressure.
His first film appearance, using the Touch Connors credit, was in a secondary role in the Joan Crawford thriller "Sudden Fear" (1952).
My defensive pal, with her sudden fear that she had the eyes of an old lady, hadn't smeared eyeliner around her face.
But every time a Bill Clinton or a Barack Obama gets the keys to the Oval Office, Republicans flip the script, generating a sudden fear of mountains of debt.
But any liberal with an ounce of self-awareness should recognize the resemblance between their sudden fear of juristocracy and the longstanding conservative critique of exactly the same thing.
It wasn't until August, though, that he had a sudden fear about images of him dancing being put online, so he decided to try and break the internet by destroying the communications boxes.
Tuesday's attacks on Brussels airport and a metro station unfolded hours before voters head to the polls in several Western states and underscored the way the sudden fear of terrorism can transform volatile American political campaigns.
With his swift tracing of Athens's rise from a backwater polis to burgeoning power, the historian not only underscores the near-sudden fear that overtakes Sparta but also lays bare the tragic implications of the brewing collision.
Another setback took place in 1983, when during a late-night flight home from Atlanta the small plane Franklin was on "did one of those dipsy-doodles" in midair and shocked the singer into a sudden fear of flying, she told PEOPLE.
Later the same year, she received her third—and final—Academy Award nomination for Sudden Fear for RKO Radio Pictures.
In addition to his work on television, he appeared in numerous films, including Sudden Fear (1952), Situation Hopeless... But Not Serious (1965), Stagecoach (1966), Kiss the Girls and Make Them Die (1966), and Too Scared to Scream (1985), which he also produced.
Dennis's mother gives Dennis his teddy bear and leaves the lights on for Dennis. Dennis screams and shouts he will not go to bed. The mother, surprised at this sudden fear of bed, asks why. Dennis explains that he is afraid of humans.
The mole in its latter years can be seen at the beginning of the 1957 movie Pal Joey as Frank Sinatra's character arrives by train and makes his way to the ferry. It also appears in the 1952 noir film "Sudden Fear" starring Joan Crawford.
Palance was second billed in just his third film, playing opposite Joan Crawford in the thriller Sudden Fear (1952). His character is written in as having been a coal miner, just as Palance's father had been.Sudden Fear, 1952. Palance received an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor.
After her career at Warner's fizzled out slowly even though she wished to remain with Warner's, after years of reinventing herself, she bought out her contract. Afterwards, she bought the rights to a screenplay called Sudden Fear which brought her a third Academy Award nomination for Best Actress in 1953.
In addition, Sudden Fear was nominated for four Academy Awards for Best Actress (Crawford); Best Actor (Palance); Best Costume Design; and Best Cinematography Charles Lang. This would be the first time Crawford competed with her arch-rival Bette Davis for Best Actress. Both lost to Shirley Booth for her performance in Come Back Little Sheba.
She achieved her highest profile with Sudden Fear (1952), The Big Heat (1953), Human Desire (1954), and Oklahoma! (1955), but her film career began to wane soon afterwards. Grahame returned to work on the stage, but continued to appear in films and television productions, usually in supporting roles. In 1974, she was diagnosed with breast cancer.
Jack Palance ( ; born Volodymyr Palahniuk (); February 18, 1919 – November 10, 2006) was an American actor of Ukrainian descent. Known for playing tough guys and villains, Palance was nominated for three Academy Awards, all for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, receiving nominations for his roles in Sudden Fear (1952) and Shane (1953), and winning the Oscar almost 40 years later for his role in City Slickers (1991).
They had a bit hit with Sudden Fear. In 1953 he made a film and TV series in Australia about Long John Silver. The film gave an early role to Rod Taylor who Kafuman put under contract, reportedly to make Come Away Pearler and Captain Henry Morgan but neither were made. In 1957 he bought the rights to more than 300 Grand Guignol plays.
Cheyney, The Shining Hour, The Bride Wore Red, Mannequin). These characters and stories were well received by Depression-era audiences, and were popular with women. Crawford became one of Hollywood's more prominent movie stars, and one of the higher-paid women in the United States. In 1945, she won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her work in Mildred Pierce, and received Best Actress nominations for Possessed (1947) and Sudden Fear (1952).
Huston was the ninth actress to play Jane, appearing in Tarzan's Peril (1951). (Another source says, "She becomes the fifteenth "Jane" in this jungle-king series.") Her other films include the iconic film noir Out of the Past (released in the UK as Build My Gallows High) (1947), in which she plays Robert Mitchum's girlfriend. She appeared in The Racket (1951), which also starred Mitchum, and in the Joan Crawford dramas Flamingo Road (1949) and Sudden Fear (1952).
Along with many in Hollywood, Bernstein faced censure during the McCarthy era of the early 1950s. Bernstein was called by the House Un-American Activities Committee when it was discovered that he had written some music reviews for a Communist newspaper. After he refused to name names, pointing out that he had never attended a Communist Party meeting, he found himself composing music for movies such as Robot Monster and Cat-Women of the Moon, a step down from his earlier Sudden Fear and Saturday's Hero.
The story is about a girl called Daisy and the friends at her new school (in alphabetical order): Amy, Bella, Chloe, Daisy and Emily (aka The Alphabet Girls). Each girl has their birthday coming up consecutively, they all decide that a sleepover party would be a good idea. Daisy is invited to Amy's, Bella's and Emily's sleepovers without hesitation. However, Chloe, who is very bossy and tries not to invite Daisy to her sleepover, starts to boss everyone into her ideas and especially torment Daisy, this then enables a sudden fear that Lily (Daisy's disabled sister) would trigger further torment from Chloe.
Sky Commando is a 1953 American war film released by Columbia Pictures, directed by Fred F. Sears and starring Dan Duryea, Frances Gifford and Mike Connors (credited as "Touch Conners"). The Cold War period provides the background, although the plot concerns a flashback to World War II aerial action. Sky Commando was the last major film feature for Frances Gifford as her postwar career was affected by serious personal problems. The film was one of Connors' first, having made his debut in Sudden Fear (1952); he had previously appeared in Sears' The 49th Man, earlier in 1953.
Otis Guernsey, Jr. in the New York Herald Tribune wrote "Joan Crawford has another of her star-sized roles...she is vivid and irritable, volcanic and feminine...Here is Joan Crawford all over the screen, in command, in love and in color, a real movie star in what amounts to a carefully produced one-woman show."Quirk, Lawrence J.. The Films of Joan Crawford. The Citadel Press, 1968. Torch Song was regarded as a return for Joan Crawford, who, when the picture was released, had received an Academy Award nomination for her performance in Sudden Fear from the previous year.
The night of Alita's challenge race against Jashugan, Zapan saw the broadcast and was struck by a sudden fear that resulted in him clawing off his second face. He accidentally killed Sara when she tried to stop him and thus became a bounty, being hunted by Murdock for three years. Murdock finally confronted Zapan in the sewers with his four cyborg dogs, but Alita intervened and gave Zapan the opportunity to attack her while her back was turned and she played a song on a portable keyboard. Zapan could not bring himself to attack and was torn to pieces by Murdock's dogs.
Her other memorable roles included the scheming Irene Neves in Sudden Fear (also 1952), the femme fatale Vicki Buckley in Human Desire (1953), and mob moll Debby Marsh in Fritz Lang's The Big Heat (1953) in which, in a horrifying off- screen scene, she is scarred by hot coffee thrown in her face by Lee Marvin's character. Grahame appeared as wealthy seductress Harriet Lang in Stanley Kramer's Not as a Stranger (1955) starring Olivia de Havilland, Robert Mitchum, and Frank Sinatra. Grahame also did her own stunts as Angel the Elephant Girl in Cecil B. DeMille's The Greatest Show on Earth, which won the Oscar for best film of 1952.
Because the script of a gangster who saw the light had become trite by the 1950s, some sources suggest that studio head Jack L. Warner offered Crawford the role hoping the expensive star would turn it down so he could put her on suspension. That could also be the reason he offered the eye surgeon's role to Dennis Morgan, whose box-office appeal had diminished since World War II. To Warner's surprise, both stars accepted the film. Crawford later instructed her agents to negotiate an end to her contract at Warner Bros., and she went on to make the independently produced hit Sudden Fear.
When Jack asks him what he plans to do after this, Peter is shocked to realize that he'd never considered an "after this". His sudden fear that he would never leave is further solidified by a conversation that he has with Bob and Steve in a bar later that night. Steve explains that almost everyone who lives in Humboldt County now came from somewhere else and never left, including Rosie and Jack (who used to be a Physics professor at UCLA). He also reveals that he was in Peter's shoes a few years earlier; he was a student at Stanford and followed a girl out to Humboldt county and never left.
In spite of his extensive travels in Italy, Spain, France, Germany and Britain, Goropius remained attached to his homeland, and reported on various curiosities and customs from his native region. In his Origines Antwerpianae (1569), a treatise describing the antiquities of Antwerp, Goropius reports various curiosities, among them that a youth almost nine feet tall and a woman about ten feet tall lived near his home. He also reports that Ters, a deity who seems to have been an equivalent of Priapus, was invoked by Antwerpian women when they were taken by surprise or sudden fear, and that there was a house in Antwerp adjoining the prison of Het Steen that bore a statue which had been furnished with a large worn away phallus.
David Miller (November 28, 1909 – April 14, 1992) was an American film director who directed such varied films as Billy the Kid (1941) with Robert Taylor and Brian Donlevy, Flying Tigers (1943) with John Wayne, and Love Happy (1949) with the Marx Brothers. Bawden is a veteran Canadian film critic; this webpage contains his 1982 interview of Miller and a note of his date of death. Miller directed Lonely Are the Brave (1962) with Kirk Douglas; Emanuel Levy wrote in 2009 that it "is the most accomplished film of David Miller, who directs with eloquent feeling for landscape and attention to character." Others feel that Miller's filmic masterpiece is his 1952 Noir thriller and Joan Crawford vehicle Sudden Fear co-starring the terrific and terrifying Jack Palance and Gloria Grahame at her most magnificent.
In folklore, maternal imprinting, or Versehen (a German noun meaning "inadvertance" or as a verb "to provide") as it is usually called, is the belief that a sudden fear of some object or animal in a pregnant woman can cause her child to bear the mark of it. Oswald Spengler understood maternal imprinting to be a folkloric understanding of what he called "blood feeling" or the formation of a group aesthetic of a bodily ideal: > What is called the Versehen of a pregnant woman is only a particular and not > very important instance of the workings of a very deep and powerful > formative principle inherent in all that is of the race side. It is a matter > of common observation that elderly married people become strangely like one > another, although probably Science with its measuring instruments would > "prove" the exact opposite. It is impossible to exaggerate the formative > power of this living pulse, this strong inward feeling for the perfection of > one's own type.
Connors with Leigh Snowden (left) and Claire Kelly in a publicity photo for Tightrope!, 1960 Connors's film career started in the early 1950s, when he made his acting debut in a supporting role opposite Joan Crawford and Jack Palance in the thriller Sudden Fear (1952). He had initially been rejected for an audition by producer Joseph Kaufman due to his lack of experience, but after sneaking into Republic Pictures and meeting director David Miller, Connors was given a chance to read the script and was offered the part. Connors was cast in the critically acclaimed John Wayne film, Island in the Sky in which he played a crewman on one of the search-and-rescue planes. In 1956, he played an Amalekite herder in Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments. Connors appeared in numerous television series, including the co-starring role in the 1955 episode "Tomas and the Widow" of the anthology series Frontier.
F-A-I-T-H-F-U-L-N-E-S-S (Susan Ashton) Jun-93 Cities Under Siege: America and Violent Crime (Eric Champion) Jul-93 Bridging the Generation Gap (Phillips, Craig and Dean) Aug-93 Tongue-Tied: Watch Your Words (Pam Thum) After the August 1993 episode, production of Fire by Nite at Willie George Ministries shut down. Several episodes from the Willie George Ministries run were edited and re-released by Blaine Bartel during his time in Colorado. May-94 Generation 911 (Bryan Duncan) (This program also featured a special look at the many bloopers and practical jokes done on the set of Fire by Nite entitled "Best of Boopers", supposed to be "Best of Bloopers".) Jun-94 Unreasonable Christianity (Rick Cua) Jul-94 Idol Breakdown (Ray Boltz) Aug-94 Families Under Siege (Kenny Marks) Sep-94 Sudden Fear (Mark Lowry) Oct-94 Endangered Generation (Geoff Moore) Dec-94 Around the World in 30 Minutes or So (Ron Luce) Other episodes produced in Colorado exist; it is unknown how many of the previous episodes were re- released during this time period. Fire by Nite has been removed from JCTV's broadcast schedule.

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