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  1. He called himself Peter Ruric, rather than George Sims, for most of his life. The friend who settled his affairs after his death, in fact, did not know that his original name was George Sims. [1]

  2. Sims and Michael split when the book was still hot off the presses; as the L.A. Times gossip columnist “Tip Poff” put it on October 23, 1933, “Peter Ruric (Paul Cain) and Gertrude Michael are going places. But not together.”

  3. Jackson appeared in several television series at the beginning of his career starting with one episode of Man About The House in 1973, followed by Anna Karenina, Till Death..., The Legend of Robin Hood, Play For Today, Doctor Who, One Summer and Fairly Secret Army.

  4. Living with Michael Jackson is a television documentary in which the British journalist Martin Bashir interviewed the American singer Michael Jackson from May 2002 to January 2003. It was broadcast in the United Kingdom on ITV (as a Tonight with Trevor McDonald special) on 3 February 2003, and in the United States three days later on ABC , introduced by Barbara Walters . [ 1 ]

  5. Jan 17, 2022 · The screenwriter Peter Ruric, better known by the pseudonym Paul Cain under which he wrote novels, was himself, like the character in the film who shares his forename, an author of pulp fiction – and these lines knowingly pre-empt criticism of the improbable narrative in his own script.

  6. Mar 8, 2011 · Shareable Link. Use the link below to share a full-text version of this article with your friends and colleagues. Learn more.

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  8. William F. Nolan's notes in The Black Mask Boys hint that Cain himself (aka Peter Ruric, real name George Sims) may selected those seven stories himself, though whether he had editorial assistance is unclear. In any case, that left seven stories unreprinted.

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