Welles









Welles


Welles [welz] Examples noun

  1. (George) Orson,1915–85, U.S. actor, director, and producer.
  2. Gideon,1802–78, U.S. journalist, legislator, and government official: Secretary of the Navy 1861–69.
  3. Sumner,1892–1961, U.S. diplomat and government official.

Examples from the Web for welles Contemporary Examples of welles

  • “I’m going to use several voices to tell the story,” Welles told Bogdanovich.

    Doomed Passion Projects of Hollywood: The Lost Classics of Stanley Kubrick, Alfred Hitchcock, and More

    Marlow Stern

    March 28, 2014

  • At the end, the sonorous Welles concludes with a little talk about Halloween.

    When Mars Attacked 75 Years Ago—And Everyone Believed It

    Marc Wortman

    October 29, 2013

  • Welles, who once dismissed his masterpiece Citizen Kane as “dollar-book Freud,” was nothing if not a projector.

    Go Fuck Yourself

    Christopher Bray

    July 18, 2013

  • Welles once claimed that he preferred making a film to seeing the finished result.

    Go Fuck Yourself

    Christopher Bray

    July 18, 2013

  • Bogart could act, though, since according to Welles he was nothing like the characters he created on screen.

    Go Fuck Yourself

    Christopher Bray

    July 18, 2013

  • Historical Examples of welles

  • As he neared the Welles house he heard loud and angry voices.

    Rosemary

    Josephine Lawrence

  • Dr. Welles said only an hour ago he had no more than an even chance for his life.

    No Clue

    James Hay

  • For a moment Phoebe looked, with a bewildered air, from her mother to Mr Welles.

    The Maidens’ Lodge

    Emily Sarah Holt

  • If we have lost Mr Welles, we have lost him; and we must try for some one else.

    The Maidens’ Lodge

    Emily Sarah Holt

  • I should feel obliged to, Mr. Welles, and I should not feel unjust.

    A Philanthropist

    Josephine Daskam

  • British Dictionary definitions for welles Welles noun

    1. (George) Orson (ˈɔːs ə n). 1915–85, US film director, actor, producer, and screenwriter. His Citizen Kane (1941) and The Magnificent Ambersons (1942) are regarded as film classics
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