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		   G o o d i e f o r c h i l d r e n  | 
	  
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	        Timothy Dalton was always successful, while acting in scenes, where 
	  children were his partners on the set. He can make the audience to believe, that his hero is a real 
	  defenfer of the weak, that his hero has an ability to understand everything, that he is an 
	  affectionate father or a careful stepfather. No doubts, a lot of people became Timothy's talent's 
	  admirers due to his well done acting in "children's scenes". Let's go back a few years and look at 
	  the pics!
	    
	   
	    
	   
	        and this is his personage from the film 
	  
	  "The Beautician and the Beast", who settles off his 
	  little son to sleep, trying to take the place of his dead mother. 
	    
	   
	    
	  
	 
	  
	        When the babe will rise a little, Timothy's screen hero - smasher 
	  Rhett Butler, - will find a time to read an interesting book aloud for his doughter. Oh, nobody 
	  will  be left untoched by 
	  
	  this scene! Probably not only screen wives are looking at Dalton-father 
	  with a great deal of tenderness!
	    
	   
	    
	  
	 
	  
	        Someone will say: "It's simple - to be kind, if you live in a palace 
	  or in a baronial mansion! But in the ordinary life, when you have a million things to do, can you 
	  find a time to do it?" And Dalton's hero will answer with dignity: "Yes!". When he  executed a halt 
	  as a secret agent Jack Carver from TV-mini-serial "Lie Down with Lions", he swaddles a baby of his 
	  girl-friend while she, the nursing mother, is resting before the next march. To see the scene of a 
	  domestic idyll in the mountains of Nagorny Karabakh, click with your mouse 
	  
	  here!
	    
	   
	    
	  
	 
	  
	        Yes, indeed: Timothy Dalton's hero treats somebody else's children 
	  like his own ones. On the pic below his personage father William Bowden rescues the poor boy, 
	  possessed with demons, from a scrape, risking his own life.
	 
	    
	   
	    
	  
	 
	  
	        All the same it's the screen fatherhood, that gives the actor and 
	  audience delight, because taking care for his screen children and their rising friends, Dalton's 
	  personage should speak their language, communicating with them, and sometimes become a big child 
	  himself to take part in their adventures. On the pic below Lester Parnell from film "The Salt 
	  Water Moose" teaches Bobby how to cry like a moose. To see, how to take a ball properly ("like you 
	  are mumbling") - if you are going to play baseball, - and, certainly, how to love your own daughter, 
	  please, click with your mouse 
	  
	  here!
	    
	   
	    
	  
	         And who could do it better than Timothy's hero Matt from TV-film 
	 "Time Share" - to skip about like a child, running on the screen so fast, that it's completely 
	 impossible "to capture" good shots, much as I tried. Or who else can explain to the young boy, how 
	 
	 to conquer a heart of a beautiful young diva!
	   
	   
	    
	 
	       Another Dalton's screen image - the image of a man with irresistible 
	 attraction, -  gives the especial believability to his hero's former edifications. We made 
	 
	 a separate Page of our photo-collection to discuss this question.	 
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