A New Life
0 sources
A New Life
Summary
A New Life is a film[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- A New Life's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- A New Life was directed by Alan Alda[4].
- Alan Alda wrote the screenplay for A New Life[5].
- A New Life's genre is romantic comedy[6].
- A cast member of A New Life was Ann-Margret[7].
- A cast member of A New Life was Hal Linden[8].
- A cast member of A New Life was Veronica Hamel[9].
- A cast member of A New Life was John Shea[10].
- A cast member of A New Life was Mary Kay Place[11].
- A cast member of A New Life was Beatrice Alda[12].
- A cast member of A New Life was Alan Alda[13].
- A cast member of A New Life was Victoria Snow[14].
- A cast member of A New Life was Celia Weston[15].
- A cast member of A New Life was Paul Hecht[16].
- A cast member of A New Life was Bill Irwin[17].
- A cast member of A New Life was Catherine Disher[18].
- A cast member of A New Life was Michael Kirby[19].
- A cast member of A New Life was Malcolm Stewart[20].
- A cast member of A New Life was Fiona Reid[21].
- A cast member of A New Life was C. David Johnson[22].
- A cast member of A New Life was David Eisner[23].
- A New Life was produced by Martin Bregman[24].
- The original language of A New Life was English[25].
- A New Life was distributed by video on demand[26].
- A New Life's review score is recorded as 29%[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
A New Life was produced by Martin Bregman[24]. It was directed by Alan Alda[4]. Alan Alda wrote the screenplay for it[5]. Cast members include Ann-Margret[7], Hal Linden[8], Veronica Hamel[9], John Shea[10], Mary Kay Place[11], and Beatrice Alda[12].
Publication
A New Life was released on January 1, 1988[28]. The original language of it was English[25]. Its genre is romantic comedy[6]. It was distributed by video on demand[26].
Reception
Reviews include 29%[27] and 4.5/10[29].
Why It Matters
A New Life has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[30]