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No posts for this movie? I thought it wasn't the best acting but an interesting movie nonetheless.



The patient's screaming disturbing me, performed removal of vocal chords. ~Zombie Holocaust

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[deleted]

I was gettin ready to ask the same question

DarkAlessa now the end of day and Iam the Reaper:silent hill

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[deleted]

He's definitely full of himself, isn't he?

The way he gets 2 out of 3 of his wives together making each feel that he's 'their' husband...his invitations to join him on his trips, unbeknowest to them, to see another wife...

Seems to me that these women aren't too bright to fall for his lines over and over again...


Here's to those who wish me well...

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Wife number two should have been suspicious of the encounter with the son. He did not act like a guy meeting his step mom for the first time.

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http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19911009&slug=1309907

Respected Doc Had Everyone Fooled -- He Juggled 3 Homes, 3 Marriages Without Suspicion Until His Death

By Laura Myers AP

STANFORD, Calif. - Dr. Norman Lewiston's Stanford University Medical Center colleagues believed his work was his whole life. That is, until his death, when three widows came forward to mourn the loss of their loving husband.

"I don't know where he found the time," said Diarmuid McGuire, a spokesman for the Lucile Salter Packard Children's Hospital, where Lewiston worked when he wasn't teaching pediatrics. "When I say he was dedicated to his work, I mean it was the focus of his life."

Lewiston was able to juggle 3 homes & 3 wives - two in the San Francisco Bay area & one in Southern California - apparently because each woman thought he was so busy with his work that he frequently had to be away from home.
He headed the Cystic Fibrosis Clinic at the hospital & often lectured & traveled.

"I can't figure out why - or how - he did it," said one of the wives, Robyn Phelps, 42, of La Mesa, a suburb of San Diego. "I truly believe he loved all three of us but was incapable of letting go of any of the relationships."
Along with three widows, the respected lung-transplant specialist also left behind questions about his handling of hospital research funds.

Auditors have found a private bank account Lewiston set up for research expenses & at least one check written to an ex-wife. But so far they have been unable to prove any wrongdoing.

"So far, everything looks like it was handled aboveboard, but when you have a case like this there's reason to be suspicious," McGuire said.

Phelps said that when Lewiston wasn't staying at their Southern California home, the doctor told her he was staying over at the hospital.

Another wife, Katy Mayer Lewiston of Los Altos, said her husband told her he frequently went to the San Diego area to visit doctor friends.

The third wife, Diane Brownell Lewiston of Palo Alto, has refused to discuss her late husband.

Phelps finally caught on to the 52-year-old doctor just before he died of a heart attack Aug. 6. "In May or June she started smelling around the woodpile after she became suspicious," said Phelps' lawyer, E. Gregory Alford.

The other wives found out when they went to claim Lewiston's body.

"I was shocked," Katy Lewiston said yesterday. "I loved him very much & I thought he was a wonderful man."

The 44-year-old woman was Lewiston's "public wife," accompanying him to medical-school functions. She married him in 1985, believing he was divorced.

But he had married Diane Lewiston in 1960. The 52-year-old Palo Alto woman, who bore Lewiston three children, was listed as sole beneficiary in his will, according to her attorney.

As executor of the doctor's estate, Diane has moved to acquire a 50 percent interest in the home he owned with Katy Lewiston.

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