an actor with an Everyman charm who played the affable, beer-loving barfly Norm on the hit 1980s TV comedy
Lambert spent part of six seasons in the NHL as a player with Detroit, the New York Rangers and Quebec.Jonathan Toews has informed his longtime agent he intends to come back to the NHL after missing the past two seasons.
Pat Brisson confirmed to The Associated Press on Thursday that Toews reached out to him on Wednesday to say he’s 100% ready to move forward on a comeback attempt.Toews, 37, is a free agent now, and his camp can speak with any of the league’s 32 teams immediately. Free agency opens July 1.A return to hockey would be a triumphant one if Toews can pull it off.
Chosen one of the NHL’s top 100 players from its first 100 years, the Winnipeg, Manitoba, native played 15 seasons with the Chicago Blackhawks from 2007-23 and captained them to the Stanley Cup three times as one of the faces of the franchise. Toews also helped Canada win gold at back-to-back Olympics in 2010 and ’14.from hockey two years ago citing the effects of
. His exit coincided with Chicago trading fellow star Patrick Kane and going into a full-scale rebuild.
TSN first reported Toews’ attempt to return.While he had many highs in the industry, Levy also recalled a big heartbreak when “Saving Private Ryan” lost the best picture trophy to “Shakespeare in Love” at the 71st Academy Awards.
“That was the toughest night of my life in terms of the business,” Levy said. But he put on a brave face at the Governor’s Ball following the ceremony.to Levy in 2018, noting that it takes, “Something of a storyteller to get an audience hooked on the story without giving away the story.”
Levy remained devoted to Spielberg, and Amblin Entertainment, up to his full retirement in 2024. For him, it never got old.“How lucky can you be? I mean it,” he said in 2018. “We work for the best filmmaker around.”