-
Dennis Quaid, who portrayed President Clinton, was also up for an acting award.
BBC: Mad Men wins top Emmy for third year running
-
Dennis Quaid plays Arlis Sweeney, who as a young boy was an unwilling accomplice to the crimes of his father (James Caan).
NEWYORKER: Flesh and Bone
-
Ford's marriage breakdown follows other much publicised Hollywood divorces, including those of Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman and Dennis Quaid and Meg Ryan.
BBC: Harrison Ford separates from wife
-
There he finds himself in the cross hairs of Sheriff Ralph Lamb (Dennis Quaid), whose real-life war with the wiseguys inspired the series.
WSJ: Michael Chiklis | Heavy Opportunities | A Cultural Conversation by Joanne Kaufman
-
As I watched Topher Grace and Dennis Quaid "standing on their heads" I couldn't help but draw some comparisons to Microsoft's upside-down WMV strategy.
ENGADGET: The Clicker: Dear Microsoft, "help me help you."
-
With bigger production budgets and proven actors such as Helen Hunt and Dennis Quaid to carry the storylines, faith-based films have made huge strides in reaching bigger, more diverse audiences.
FORBES: What Role Does Faith Play in Building Brands?
-
Add to the mix a United States President (Dennis Quaid) who appears on the show in order to boost his ratings, and the makings of a scathing farce are all in place.
NEWYORKER: American Dreamz
-
Actor Dennis Quaid, you know, very famous, well-known actor - he and his wife were on the show talking about this horrible thing that happened to them and to their twins, who were just born.
NPR: Facing Fire, Obama to Give Speech on Race
-
Jack Hall (Dennis Quaid) is a climatologist who realizes, as a slice of the polar ice cap slides into the sea, that the end of the world (or, at any rate, of that half of the world that drives S.U.V.s) is nigh.
NEWYORKER: The Day After Tomorrow
-
That's why one's heart sinks at the banality of Mr. Weitz's screenplay, and the clumsiness of most of the cast: Dennis Quaid as the befuddled president, Marcia Gay Harden as his wife, Hugh Grant as the TV show's smarmy host, Chris Klein as an amorous soldier and Sam Golzari as Omer, the singing assassin.
WSJ: Bush + Terror = Big Laffs?