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Happy 119th Birthday Shirley Booth

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Today is the 119th  birthday of Shirley Booth.  She was an amazing actress, capable of showing unflattering, unpopular, and raw emotions. On the other end of that, she was Hazel, of the same-titled TV show from the 1960s. Her acting on that show was so effortless and invisible, most people thought she was exactly like Hazel in real life.  The world is a better place because she was in it and still feels the loss that she has left.NAME: Shirley Booth
OCCUPATION: Film Actress, Theater Actress, Television Actress
BIRTH DATE: August 30, 1898
DEATH DATE: October 16, 1992
PLACE OF BIRTH: New York City, New York
PLACE OF DEATH: North Chatham, Massachusetts
ORIGINALLY: Marjory Ford
REMAINS: Buried, Mount Hebron Cemetery, Upper Montclair, NJ
OSCAR for Best Actress 1953 for Come Back, Little Sheba
GOLDEN GLOBE 1953 for Come Back, Little Sheba
EMMY 1962 for Hazel
EMMY 1963 for Hazel
TONY 1949 for Goodbye, Miss Fancy
TONY 1950 for Come Back, Little Sheba
TONY 1953 for Time of the Cuckoo
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME 6840 Hollywood Blvd.

BEST KNOWN FOR: Shirley Booth was an American actress who played Lola Delaney in the drama Come Back, Little Sheba, for which she received a Tony Award in 1950.

Shirley Booth was an American actress. Primarily a theatre actress, Booth’s Broadway career began in 1925. Her most significant success was as Lola Delaney, in the drama Come Back, Little Sheba, for which she received a Tony Award in 1950. She made her film debut, reprising her role in the 1952 film version, and won both the Academy Award for Best Actress and Golden Globe Award for Best Actress for her performance. Despite her successful entry into films, she preferred stage acting, and made only four more films.

From 1961 until 1966, she played the title role in the sitcom Hazel, for which she won two Emmy Awards, and was acclaimed for her performance in the 1966 television production of The Glass Menagerie. She retired in 1974.

Shirley Booth has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6840 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood.

TELEVISION
Hazel Hazel Burke (1961-66)

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
The Year Without a Santa Claus (10-Dec-1974) [VOICE]
Hot Spell (17-Sep-1958)
The Matchmaker (12-Aug-1958) · Dolly “Gallagher” Levi
About Mrs. Leslie (27-Jun-1954) · Mrs. Leslie
Main Street to Broadway (13-Oct-1953) · Herself
Come Back, Little Sheba (24-Dec-1952) · Lola Delaney

Source: Shirley Booth

Source: Shirley Booth – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Source: Shirley Booth – Theater Actress, Film Actress, Television Actress – Biography.com

Source: Shirley Booth, Star of TV, Radio, Stage and Screen, Is Dead at 94

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Filed under: read, Uncategorized, Watch Tagged: Academy Award, Academy Award for Best Actress, activism, Actor, All rights reserved, Arts Theatre, ASICS, Bill de Blasio, Borough (New York City), Brett Ratner, Britney Spears, Broadway theatre, BuzzFeed, Cancer survivor, Chatham, Come Back, Come Back Little Sheba (1952 film), Crime scene, Donald Trump, E minor, Emmy Award, Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama, Hazel, High Line (New York City), Hollywood, Hollywood Walk of Fame, Little Sheba (1952 film), Los Angeles, Mariah Carey, Massachusetts, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Mexico–United States border, New York, New York City, New York City Police Department, Reality television, San Francisco, Shirley Booth, style icon, Television, Tijuana, Tony Award, Union Square (New York City)

Happy 95th Birthday Sid Caesar

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Today is the 95th birthday of Sid Ceasar.  You watch TV.  He was in that covered wagon charting the uncharted, mapping the unmapped in TV land.  He was a pioneer.  The world is a better place because he was in it and still feels the loss that he has left.

sidcaesar-13

 

NAME: Sid Caesar
OCCUPATION: Comedian
BIRTH DATE: September 8, 1922
DEATH DATE: February 12, 2014
PLACE OF BIRTH: Yonkers, New York
PLACE OF DEATH: Beverly Hills, California
FRIARS CLUB
BROADCASTING AND CABLE HALL OF FAME
EMMY 1956
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME: 7014 Hollywood Blvd (television)

BEST KNOWN FOR: Sid Caesar was a comedian and the creator of the classic Emmy Award-winning television variety program Your Show of Shows.

Famed comedian Sid Caesar was born in Yonkers, New York, on September 8, 1922, the youngest of three brothers. Both of his parents immigrated to the United States as children, his father from Poland and his mother from Russia. His last name was given to his father by an immigration officer at Ellis Island. The Caesar family ran a restaurant in Yonkers.

Caesar started out as a musician. He reportedly took up the saxophone after a customer left one behind at his parents’ restaurant. During his years at Yonkers High School, Caesar began playing in a band. After graduating in 1939, he found work in the summer resorts in the Catskill Mountains. Caesar was hired as a musician, but he also started doing some comedy as well.

During World War II, Caesar served with the U.S. Coast Guard. His famous sense of humor was discovered by a producer who put him in a Coast Guard revue called Tars and Stars as a comedian. Caesar also appeared in a film version of the production that was released in 1946.

Caesar made his way to Broadway two years later, landing a role in Make Mine Manhattan. This popular revue helped him make the leap into an emerging medium—television—the following year. Caesar also starred on the variety show The Admiral Broadway Revue alongside Imogene Coca and Marge and Gower Champion. While this program didn’t last long, the actor’s next effort would make TV history.

In 1950, Sid Caesar quickly became a Saturday night favorite with Your Show of Shows, a sketch-comedy program also starring Imogene Coca and Carl Reiner, among others. He created a beloved array of characters, from the Professor to cool musician Progress Hornsby.

Additionally, Caesar was a gifted mine and mimic, earning himself comparisons to Charlie Chaplin. His talents were greatly enhanced by a stellar writing staff that included Mel Brooks, Neil Simon and Larry Gelbart over the show’s four-year run. Behind the scenes, Caesar battled with problems with alcohol.

After Your Show of Shows ended in 1954, Caesar moved on to his next successful TV project: Caesar’s Hour. He won his second Emmy Award for his work on the variety show in 1957. Reuniting with Imogene Coca yet again, he went on to star in another entertainment program, Sid Caesar Invites You. Unfortunately, the project was short-lived.

In the early 1960s, Caesar returned to Broadway with a role in the musical comedy Little Me. He received a great deal of praise for his performance, including a Tony Award nomination. The actor made another attempt to recapture his earlier TV success with The Sid Caesar Show in 1963, but the program failed to catch on with viewers.

In the 1970s and ’80s, Caesar made a number of TV and film appearances. He took on small parts in such popular movies as the disaster drama Airport 1975 and the 1978 musical Grease, starring John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John. Caesar also had a memorable turn as a caveman in the Mel Brooks comedy History of the World: Part I (1981).

Long plagued by personal demons, Caesar shared details of his struggles and his recovery in his 1983 autobiography, Where Have I Been?. Two years later, he was inducted into the Television Hall of Fame.

In 2003, Caesar reflected on his career in the book Caesar’s Hours: My Life in Comedy, with Love and Laughter, which he co-wrote with Eddy Friedfeld. In 2012, he appeared in the documentary Lunch, a film chronicling a weekly get-together between Caesar and some of Hollywood’s TV veterans, including Monty Hall from the long-running game show Let’s Make a Deal and announcer Gary Owens.

Following a brief illness, Sid Caesar died on February 12, 2014, at the age of 91, in Beverly Hills, California.

TELEVISION
Your Show of Shows
Caesar’s Hour Bob Victor

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
When Comedy Went to School (6-Jun-2013) · Himself
Comic Book: The Movie (27-Jan-2004) · Julius
The Wonderful Ice Cream Suit (23-Jan-1998)
Vegas Vacation (14-Feb-1997)
The Great Mom Swap (23-Sep-1995)
Freedom Fighter (11-Jan-1988)
The Emperor’s New Clothes (1987) · Emperor
Stoogemania (Jun-1986)
Alice in Wonderland (9-Dec-1985)
Cannonball Run II (29-Jun-1984)
Over the Brooklyn Bridge (2-Mar-1984)
Grease 2 (11-Jun-1982) · Coach Calhoun
History of the World: Part I (12-Jun-1981)
The Munsters’ Revenge (27-Feb-1981)
The Fiendish Plot of Dr. Fu Manchu (8-Aug-1980)
Grease (7-Jul-1978) · Coach Calhoun
The Cheap Detective (23-Jun-1978)
Fire Sale (6-Jan-1978)
Curse of the Black Widow (16-Sep-1977)
Silent Movie (16-Jun-1976)
Airport 1975 (18-Oct-1974) · Barney
The Spirit Is Willing (Jul-1967)
A Guide for the Married Man (25-May-1967)
The Busy Body (12-Mar-1967)
It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World (7-Nov-1963) · Melville Crump
The Guilt of Janet Ames (6-Mar-1947) · Sammy Weaver

Author of books:
Caesar’s Hours: My Life in Comedy, With Love and Laughter (memoir, with Eddy Friedfeld)
Where Have I Been: An Autobiography (memoir, with Bill Davidson)

Source: Sid Caesar – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Source: Sid Caesar – Comedian – Biography.com

Source: Sid Caesar Dead, Iconic Comedian Dies At 91 | Variety

Source: Sid Caesar

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Filed under: Listen, read, Watch Tagged: 2001: A Space Odyssey (film), Academy Award, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Adam Sandler, Admiral Broadway Revue, Alan Jay Lerner, Android (operating system), Beverly Hills, Blake Edwards, Broadway theatre, Burbank, Caesar, California, Carl Reiner, Charlie Chaplin, Coca-Cola, Diff'rent Strokes, Dom DeLuise, Emmy Award, George C. Scott, High Anxiety, History of the World, Imogene Coca, It's a Mad, Jack Riley (actor), List of Rugrats characters, Lucille Ball, Mad, Mad World, Mamie Eisenhower, Marvin Kaplan, Meet Millie, Mel Brooks, Mel's Diner, Neil Simon, Nickelodeon, Night Court, Part I, Rugrats, Sid Caesar, Ted Danson, The Admiral Broadway Revue, The Bob Newhart Show, The Great Race, Theatre West, Tony Award, Yonkers High School, Your Show of Shows

Happy 75th Birthday Madeline Kahn

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Today is the 75th birthday of the brilliant actress Madeline Kahn. She has been a part of some of the smartest comedies of the 20th century. Her very first credited film is one of my all-time favorites: What’s Up Doc? Have you seen it? You must. She has that iconic scene in Clue and she was even in The Muppet Movie. Do yourself a favor and find one of her films to watch, you’ll thank me later. The world is a better place because she was in it and still feels the loss that she has left.

NAME: Madeline Kahn
OCCUPATION: Actress
BIRTH DATE: September 29, 1942
DEATH DATE: December 3, 1999
EDUCATION: Hofstra University
PLACE OF BIRTH: Boston, Massachusetts
PLACE OF DEATH: New York, New York
ORIGINALLY: Madeleine Gail Wolfson
REMAINS: Cremated

BEST KNOWN FOR: Madeleine Kahn was an actress of stage and screen known for her roles in Mel Brooks‘ comedies such as Blazing Saddles and High Anxiety.

Born Madeline Gail Wolfson September 29, 1942 in Boston, Massachusetts. Kahn began acting in high school and starred in several campus productions, eventually earning a drama scholarship to Hofstra University.

After graduating from Hofstra, Kahn performed on stage before landing a supporting role opposite Ryan O’Neal in 1973’s Paper Moon. The critical acclaim continued the following year with her portrayal of saloon singer Lili Von Shtupp in Blazing Saddles. Kahn was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her work in both films.

Primarily a comedic actress, much of Kahn’s finest work was under the direction of Mel Brooks, including 1974’s Young Frankenstein and 1977’s High Anxiety. Toward the end of her career, Kahn returned to the stage, winning a Tony Award for her role in Wendy Wasserstein’s acclaimed play, The Sisters Rosensweig.

In 1998, Kahn lent her voice as Gypsy in the wildly popular animated film, A Bug’s Life. One year later, on December 3, 1999, she died of ovarian cancer in New York. The accomplished stage and screen actress was just 57 and is survived by her husband, John Hansbury.

TELEVISION
Cosby Pauline Fox (1996-99)
Mr. President Lois Gullickson (1987-88)
Oh Madeline Madeline Wayne (1983-84)

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Judy Berlin (10-Sep-1999)
A Bug’s Life (14-Nov-1998) [VOICE]
Nixon (20-Dec-1995) · Martha Mitchell
Mixed Nuts (21-Dec-1994)
Betsy’s Wedding (22-Jun-1990)
An American Tail (21-Nov-1986) · Gussie Mausheimer [VOICE]
Wanted: The Perfect Guy (1-Oct-1986)
My Little Pony: The Movie (20-Jun-1986) [VOICE]
Clue (13-Dec-1985)
City Heat (7-Dec-1984)
Yellowbeard (24-Jun-1983)
Slapstick (of Another Kind) (1982)
History of the World: Part I (12-Jun-1981)
First Family (25-Dec-1980)
Wholly Moses! (13-Jun-1980)
Happy Birthday, Gemini (2-May-1980) · Bunny
Simon (1980)
The Muppet Movie (22-Jun-1979)
The Cheap Detective (23-Jun-1978)
High Anxiety (25-Dec-1977) · Victoria Brisbane
Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved Hollywood (26-May-1976)
The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes’ Smarter Brother (14-Dec-1975)
At Long Last Love (1-Mar-1975) · Kitty O’Kelly
Young Frankenstein (15-Dec-1974) · Elizabeth
Blazing Saddles (7-Feb-1974) · Lili Von Shtupp
From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (27-Sep-1973)
Paper Moon (9-May-1973) · Trixie Delight
What’s Up, Doc? (9-Mar-1972)

Source: Madeline Kahn – Wikipedia

Source: Madeline Kahn

Source: Madeline Kahn – Actress – Biography.com

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Filed under: read Tagged: Academy Award, Academy Awards, Anne Bancroft, Bill Evans, Blazing Saddles, Boston Herald, Burt Bacharach, Carly Rae Jepsen, Charlottesville, Cleavon Little, Emmy Award, History of the World, Imogene Coca, Mel Brooks, Nazism, New York, Part I, Sid Caesar, The Bronx, The Miracle Worker (1962 film), Virginia, Yonkers

Happy 93rd Birthday Truman Capote

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Today is the 93rd birthday of the author Truman Capote.  I had read Breakfast At Tiffany’s years ago, long before I got a job at Tiffany & Co. and thought it was a bit strange that people would mention it as much as they did.  Even the film is pretty clear at what Holly Golightly does for a living, in the book, it is quite plain and simple.  I found it even stranger that Tiffany & Co. would glamorize it as much as they do.  I guess they aren’t paying very close attention either.  His work transcends all and is in the general American consciousness, even if they don’t completely understand why or the details of it.  All that is pretty great.  The world is a better place because he was in it and still feels the loss that he has left.

truman-capote

NAME: Truman Capote
OCCUPATION: Author
BIRTH DATE: September 30, 1924
DEATH DATE: August 25, 1984
EDUCATION: St. Joseph Military Academy, Greenwich High School, Trinity School, Dwight School
PLACE OF BIRTH: New Orleans, Louisiana
PLACE OF DEATH: Los Angeles, California
REMAINS: Buried, Westwood Memorial Park Cemetery, Los Angeles, CA
O. Henry Award 1948 for Shut a Final Door
Edgar Allan Poe Award 1962 for The Innocents (best motion picture)
Edgar Allan Poe Award 1966 for In Cold Blood (best fact crime)

BEST KNOWN FOR: Truman Capote was a trailblazing writer of Southern descent known for the works Breakfast at Tiffany’s and In Cold Blood, among others.

Acclaimed writer Truman Capote was born Truman Streckfus Persons on September 30, 1924, in New Orleans, Louisiana. One of the 20th century’s most well-known writers, Capote was as fascinating a character as those who appeared in his stories. His parents were an odd pair—a small-town girl named Lillie Mae and a charming schemer called Arch—and they largely neglected their son, often leaving him in the care of others. Capote spent much of his young life in the care of his mother’s relatives in Monroeville, Alabama.

In Monroeville, Capote befriended a young Harper Lee. The two were opposites—Capote was a sensitive boy who was picked on by other kids for being a wimp, while Lee was a rough and tumble tomboy. Despite their differences, Lee found Capote to be a delight, calling him “a pocket Merlin” for his creative and inventive ways. Little did these playful pals know that they would both become famous writers one day.

While he had fun with his friends, Capote also had to struggle with his nightmarish family life. Seeing little of his mother and his father over the years, he often wrestled with feeling abandoned by them. One of the few times he caught their interest was during their divorce with each of them fighting for custody as a way to hurt the other. Capote finally did get to live with his mother full time in 1932, but this reunion did not turn out as he had hoped. He moved to New York City to live with her and his new stepfather, Joe Capote.

I don’t care what anybody says about me as long as it isn’t true.

His once-doting mother was quite different once he started to encounter her on a daily basis. Lillie Mae—now calling herself Nina—could easily be cruel or kind to Truman, and he never knew what to expect from her. She often picked on him for his effeminate ways, and for not being like other boys. His stepfather seemed to be a more stable personality in the home, but Truman was not interested in his help or support at the time. Still, he was officially adopted by his stepfather, and his name was changed to Truman Garcia Capote in 1935.

 

A mediocre student, Capote did well in the courses that interested him and paid little attention in those that did not. He attended a private boys’ school in Manhattan from 1933 to 1936, where he charmed some of his classmates. An unusual boy, Capote had a gift for telling stories and entertaining people. His mother wanted to make him more masculine, and thought that sending him to a military academy would be the answer. The 1936-1937 school year proved to be a disaster for Capote. The smallest in his class, he was often picked on by the other cadets.

Returning to Manhattan, Capote started to attract attention for his work at school. Some of his teachers noted his promise as a writer. In 1939, the Capotes moved to Greenwich, Connecticut, where Truman enrolled at Greenwich High School. He stood out among his classmates with his ebullient personality. Over time, Capote developed a group of friends who would often go over to his house to smoke, drink, and dance in his room. He and his group would also go out to nearby clubs. Seeking adventure as well as an escape, Capote and his good friend Phoebe Pierce would also go into New York City and scheme their way into some of the most popular nightspots, including the Stork Club and Café Society.

While living in Greenwich, his mother’s drinking began to escalate, which made Capote’s home life even more unstable. Capote did not do well in school and had repeat the 12th grade at the Franklin School after he and his family returned to Manhattan in 1942. Instead of studying, Capote spent his nights at the clubs, making friends with Oona O’Neill, the daughter of playwright Eugene O’Neill and heiress Gloria Vanderbilt.

While still a teen, Capote got his first job working as a copyboy for The New Yorker magazine.During his time with the publication, Capote tried to get his stories published there with no success. He left The New Yorker to write full time, and started the novel Summer Crossing, which he shelved to work on a novella entitled Other Voices, Other Rooms. Capote’s first successes were not his novels, but several short stories. In 1945, editor George Davis selected Capote’s story “Miriam” about a strange little girl for publication in Mademoiselle. In addition to befriending Davis, Capote became close to his assistant Rita Smith, the sister of famous southern author Carson McCullers. She later introduced the two, and Capote and McCullers were friends for a time.

Capote’s story in Mademoiselle attracted the attention of Harper’s Bazaar fiction editor Mary Louise Aswell. The publication ran another dark and eerie story by Capote, “A Tree of Light” in its October 1945. These stories as well as “My Side of the Matter” and “Jug of Silver” helped launch Capote’s career and gave him entrée into the New York literary world.

While struggling to work on his first novel, Capote received some assistance from Carson McCullers. She helped him get accepted at Yaddo, a famous artists’ colony in New York State. Capote spent part of the summer of 1946 there, where he did some work on his novel and completed the short story, “The Headless Hawk,” which was published by Mademoiselle that fall. Capote also fell in love with Newton Arvin, a college professor and literary scholar. The bookish academic and the effervescent charmer made quite an interesting pair. Arvin, as with most of the others at Yaddo, was completely taken by Capote’s wit, manner, and appearance. That same year, Capote won the prestigious O. Henry Award for his short story “Miriam.”

His first novel, Other Voices, Other Rooms, was published in 1948 to mixed reviews. In the work, a young boy is sent to live with his father after the death of his mother. His father’s home is a decrepit old plantation. For a time the boy does not get to see his father and instead must deal with his stepmother, her cousin, and some other unusual characters that inhabit this desolate place. While some criticized elements of the story, such as its homosexual theme, many reviewers noted Capote’s talents as a writer. The book sold well, especially for a first-time author.

In addition to receiving accolades and publicity, Capote found love in 1948. He met author Jack Dunphy at a party in 1948, and the two began what was to be a 35-year relationship. During the early years of their relationship, Capote and Dunphy traveled extensively. They spent time in Europe and other places where they both worked on their own projects.

Capote followed the success of Other Voices with a collection of short stories, A Tree of Light, published in 1949. Not one to stay out of the public eye for long, his travel essays were put out in book form in 1950 as Local Color. His much-anticipated second novel, The Grass Harp, was released to in the fall of 1951. The fanciful tale explored an unlikely group of characters who take refuge from their troubles in a large tree. At the request of Broadway producer Saint Subber, Capote adapted his novel for the stage. The sets and costumes were designed by Capote’s close friend, Cecil Beaton. The comedy opened in March 1952, closing after 36 performances.

In 1953, Capote landed some film work. He wrote some of Stazione Termini (later released as Indiscretion of an American Wife in the United States), which starred Jennifer Jones and Montgomery Clift. During the filming in Italy, Capote and Clift developed a friendship. After that project wrapped, Capote was soon working on the script for the John Huston-directed Beat the Devil, starring Humphrey Bogart, Jennifer Jones and Gina Lollobrigida, during its production. His best screenplay, however, was done years later when he adapted the Henry James novel The Turn of the Screw into The Innocents (1961).

Undeterred by his past failure, Capote adapted his story about a Haitian bordello, “House of Flowers,” for the stage at Subber’s urging. The musical debuted on Broadway in 1954 with Pearl Bailey as its star and had Alvin Ailey and Diahann Carroll in the cast as well. Despite the best efforts of Capote and the show’s fine performers, the musical failed to attract enough critical and commercial attention. It closed after 165 performances. That same year, Capote suffered a great personal loss when his mother died.

Always fascinated by the rich and social elite, Capote found himself a popular figure in such circles. He counted Gloria Guinness, Babe and Bill Paley (the founder of CBS Television), Jackie Kennedy and her sister Lee Radziwell, C. Z. Guest, and many others among his friends. Once an outsider, Capote was invited for cruises on their yachts and for stays on their estates. He loved gossip—both hearing and sharing it. In the late 1950s, Capote began discussing a novel based on this jet-set world, calling it Answered Prayers.

In 1958, Capote scored another success with Breakfast at Tiffany’s. He explored the life of a New York City party girl, Holly Golightly—who was a woman who depended on men to get by. With his usual style and panache, Capote had created a fascinating character within a well-crafted story. Three years later, the film version was released, starring Audrey Hepburn as Holly. Capote had wanted Marilyn Monroe in the lead role, and was disappointed with this adaptation.

Capote’s next big project started out as an article for The New Yorker. He set out with friend Harper Lee to write about the impact of the murder of four members of the Clutter family on their small Kansas farming community. The two traveled to Kansas to interview townspeople, friends and family of the deceased, and the investigators working to solve the crime. Truman, with his flamboyant personality and style, had a hard time initially getting himself into his subjects’ good graces. Without using tape recorders, the two would write up their notes and observations at the end of each day and compare their findings.

During their time in Kansas, the Clutters’ suspected killers, Richard Hickock and Perry Smith, were caught in Las Vegas and brought back to Kansas. Lee and Capote got a chance to interview the suspects not long after their return in January 1960. Soon after, Lee and Capote went back to New York. Capote started working on his article, which would evolve into the non-fiction masterpiece, In Cold Blood. He also corresponded with the accused killers, trying them to reveal more about themselves and the crime. In March 1960, Capote and Lee returned to Kansas for the murder trial.

While the two convicted and sentenced to death, their execution was staved off by a series of appeals. Hickock and Smith hoped that Capote would help them escape the hangman’s noose and were upset to hear that the book’s title was In Cold Blood, which indicated that the murders had been premeditated.

Writing this non-fiction masterwork took a lot out of Capote. For years, he labored on it and still had to wait for the story to find its ending in the legal system. Hickock and Smith were finally executed on April 14, 1965, at the Kansas State Penitentiary. At their request, Capote traveled to Kansas to witness their deaths. He refused to see them the day before, but he visited with both Hickock and Smith shortly before their hangings.In Cold Blood became a huge hit, both critically and commercially. Capote used a number of techniques usually found in fiction to bring this true story to life for his readers. It was first serialized in The New Yorker in four issues with readers anxiously awaiting each gripping installment. When it was published as a book, In Cold Blood was an instant best-seller.

While In Cold Blood brought him acclaim and wealth, Capote was never the same after the project. Digging into such dark territory had taken a toll on him psychologically and physically. Known to drink, Capote began drinking more and started taking tranquilizers to soothe his frayed nerves. His substance abuse problems escalated over the coming years.

Despite his problems, Capote did, however, manage to pull off one of the biggest social events of the 20th century. Attracting his society friends, literary notables, and stars, his Black and White Ball garnered a huge amount of publicity. The event was held in the Grand Ballroom at the Plaza hotel on November 28, 1966 with publisher Katharine Graham as the guest of honor. In choosing a dress code, Capote decided that the men should dress in black tie attire while women could wear either a black or white dress. Everyone had to wear a mask. One of the evening’s more memorable moments was when actress Lauren Bacall danced with director and choreographer Jerome Robbins.

Those society friends that flocked to the ball were in for a nasty shock several years later. Considered one of the notorious instances of biting the hand that feeds, Capote had a chapter from Answered Prayers published in Esquire magazine in 1976. That chapter, “La Cote Basque, 1965,” aired a lot of his society friends’ secrets as thinly veiled fiction. Many of his friends, hurt by his betrayal, turned their back on him. He claimed to be surprised by their reactions and was hurt by their rejection. By the late 1970s, Capote had moved on to the party scene at the famous club Studio 54 where he hung out with the likes of Andy Warhol, Bianca Jagger, and Liza Minnelli.

By this time, Capote’s relationship with Jack Dunphy was becoming strained. Dunphy wanted Capote to stop drinking and taking drugs, which—despite numerous trips to rehabilitation centers over the years—Capote seemed unable to do. While no longer physically intimate, the two remained close, spending time together at their neighboring homes in Sagaponack, Long Island. Capote also had other relationships with younger men, which did little to improve his emotional and psychological state.

Published in 1980, Capote’s last major work, Music for Chameleons, was a collection of non-fiction and fictional pieces, including the novella Handcarved Coffins. The collection did well, but Capote was clearly in decline, battling his addictions and physical health problems.

In the final year of his life, Capote had two bad falls, another failed stint in rehab, and a stay in a Long Island hospital for an overdose. Traveling to California, Capote went to stay with old friend Joanne Carson, the ex-wife of Johnny Carson. He died at her Los Angeles home on August 25, 1984.

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Murder by Death (23-Jun-1976) · Lionel Twain
Cocksucker Blues (1972) · Himself
Trilogy (6-Nov-1969) [VOICE]

Author of books:
Other Voices, Other Rooms (1948, novel)
A Tree of Night and Other Stories (1949, short stories)
Local Color (1950, collection)
The Grass Harp (1951, novel)
The Muses Are Heard (1956, collection)
Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1958, collection)
Selected Writings (1963, collection)
In Cold Blood (1965, novel)
A Christmas Memory (1966, fiction)
The Thanksgiving Visitor (1968, fiction)
The Dogs Bark: Public People and Private Places (1973, collection)
Music for Chameleons: New Writing (1980, collection)

Source: Truman Capote – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Source: Truman Capote – Author – Biography.com

Source: Thank Truman Capote For Shows Like ‘Making A Murderer’

Source: Truman Capote

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Happy 122nd Birthday Buster Keaton

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Today is the 122nd birthday of the actor (and my personal style icon) Buster Keaton.  I absolutely adore his expressionlessness in everything.  And then, have you seen Sunset Boulevard?  I have put the clip below.  So great.  Like a neglected old friend, I sometimes feel like I am not paying enough attention to his films, like I need to keep them closer.  The world is a better place because he was in it and still feels the loss that he has left.

buster-keaton-smile

NAME: Buster Keaton
OCCUPATION: Film Actor, Comedian
BIRTH DATE: October 4, 1895
DEATH DATE: February 1, 1966
PLACE OF BIRTH: Piqua, Kansas
PLACE OF DEATH: Woodland Hills, California
NICKNAME: Great Stone Face
ORIGINALLY: Joseph Frank Keaton IV

BEST KNOWN FOR: Comedian and director Buster Keaton was popular for his pioneering silent comedies in the 1920s.

Actor, director. Considered one of the groundbreaking comedians of the early film era, Joseph Frank Keaton IV was born October 4, 1895 in Piqua, Kansas. His parents, Joe and Myra, were both veteran vaudevillian actors and Keaton himself first began performing at the age of three when he was incorporated into their act.

As legend has it, he earned the name of “Buster” at the age of six months, after falling down a flight of stairs. Magician Harry Houdini scooped up the child and turning to the boy’s parents quipped, “What a buster.”

Keaton quickly grew used to being knocked around a bit. Working with his parents in an act that prided itself on being as rough as it was funny, Keaton was tossed around by his father frequently. During these performances Keaton would learn to display the deadpan look that would later become a hallmark of his comedy career.

 

“It was the roughest knockout act that was ever in the history of the theater,” he later said of the performances he did with his parents.

Even in Keaton’s first film, a 1917 two-reeler called “The Butcher Boy” starring Roscoe (“Fatty”) Arbuckle, Keaton was extreme slapstick, with the young actor getting subjected to range of abuses, from being submerged in molasses to getting bit by a dog.

Still, film called to Keaton and for the next two years he continued to work closely with Arbuckle for $40 a week. It was an apprenticeship of sorts and through it, Keaton was given full access to the movie making process.

In 1920 Keaton struck out on his own as a filmmaker, first with a series of two-reelers that included now classics such as The Cameraman, Steamboat Bill, Jr., and The Passionate Plumber. In 1923 Keaton started making full features such as The Three Ages (1923) and Sherlock, Jr. (1924). The line up also included perhaps his finest creation, The General (1927), which starred Keaton as a train engineer in the Civil War. Keaton was the full force behind the film, writing and directing it. But while movie proved initially to be a commercial disappointment it was later hailed as a pioneering piece of filmmaking.

Woven into his films of course, was Keaton’s trademark comedy, brilliant timing and patented facial expressions. In his early two-reelers the laughing making included a mastery of the slapstick pie.

His work also included Keaton’s penchant for doing his own stunts. He became somewhat of a Hollywood legend not just for his falls but his lack of injuries.

At the height of his career, which was in the mid 1920s, Keaton experienced some of the same kind of celebrity as another silent film star, Charlie Chaplin. His salary reached $3,500 a week and he eventually built a $300,000 home in Beverly Hills.

In 1928 Buster Keaton made the move that would later call the mistake of his life. With the advent of talkies, Keaton signed on with MGM, where he proceeded to make a string of new sound comedies that fared decently at the box office but lacked the kind of Keaton punch the filmmaker had come to expect from his work.

The reason for that largely stemmed from the fact that in signing in the deal, Keaton had forked over part of the filmmaking control to his bosses. His life quickly spiraled downward. His marriage to actress Natalie Talmadge, with whom he had two sons, fell apart and he became plagued with issues related to alcoholism and depression.

In 1934, with his contract with MGM now terminated, Keaton filed for bankruptcy. His listed assets totaled just $12,000. One year later he divorced his second wife, Mae Scribbens.

In 1940 Keaton’s life started to move upward again. He got married for a third time, to a 21-year-old dancer named Eleanor Morris, who many credited with bring him stability. The two would remain together until Keaton’s death in 1966.

A return to fame came in the 1950s, a revival that was sparked by British television, where the aging comedian appeared on a string of English programs. In the States, too, American audiences became reacquainted with Keaton after he played himself in Billy Wilder’s Sunset Boulevard (1950) and then in Chaplin’s Limelight (1952).

He also raised his profile through a string of American programs and commercials. In 1956 he was paid $50,000 by Paramount for the film rights to The Keaton Story, which follows the performer’s life from his vaudeville days through his work in Hollywood.

During this time film fans also rediscovered Keaton’s work from the silent film era. In 1962, Keaton, who’d retained full rights to his older films, reissued The General and watched with awe as it drew praise from fans and critics from all over Europe.

In October 1965 the Keaton comeback reached its height after he was invited to the Venice Film Festival, where he showed his latest project, Film, a 22-minute silent movie based on a Samuel Becket screenplay. Keaton had made movie the year before in New York. When the film concluded, Keaton received a five-minute standing ovation from the audience.

“This is the first time I’ve been invited to a film festival,” a teary-eyed Keaton proclaimed. “But I hope it won’t be the last.”

A survivor to the end, the hard working Keaton was, toward the end of his life making more than $100,000 a year just from doing commercials. In all, Keaton, who was honored in 1959 with a special Academy Award, claimed he had more work than he could handle.

Keaton, who suffered from cancer, passed away in his sleep in his home in Hollywood Hills, California, on February 1, 1966.

 

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (16-Oct-1966) · Erronius
War Italian Style (20-Apr-1966)
Film (4-Sep-1965)
Sergeant Deadhead (18-Aug-1965)
How to Stuff a Wild Bikini (14-Jul-1965) · Bwana
The Railrodder (20-Jun-1965)
Beach Blanket Bingo (14-Apr-1965) · Buster
Pajama Party (11-Nov-1964) · Chief Rotten Eagle
It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World (7-Nov-1963) · Jimmy
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (17-Jun-1960) · Lion Tamer
Around the World in Eighty Days (17-Oct-1956) · Train Conductor
Limelight (23-Oct-1952) · Calvero’s Partner
In the Good Old Summertime (29-Jul-1949) · Hickey
You’re My Everything (29-Jun-1949) · Butler
The Lovable Cheat (11-May-1949)
San Diego I Love You (29-Sep-1944)
Forever and a Day (21-Jan-1943)
Li’l Abner (1-Nov-1940)
The Villain Still Pursued Her (11-Oct-1940)
Hollywood Cavalcade (13-Oct-1939) · Himself
An Old Spanish Custom (1935)
Allez Oop (25-May-1934)
What! No Beer? (10-Feb-1933)
Speak Easily (13-Aug-1932) · Professor Timoleon Post
The Passionate Plumber (6-Feb-1932)
Sidewalks of New York (26-Sep-1931) · Homer Van Dine Harmon
Parlor, Bedroom and Bath (28-Feb-1931)
Doughboys (30-Aug-1930)
Free and Easy (22-Mar-1930)
The Hollywood Revue of 1929 (14-Aug-1929) · Himself
Spite Marriage (6-Apr-1929) · Elmer Gantry
The Cameraman (22-Sep-1928) · Buster
Steamboat Bill, Jr. (12-May-1928) · William Canfield, Jr.
College (10-Sep-1927) · A Son
The General (5-Feb-1927) · Johnny Gray
Battling Butler (19-Sep-1926)
Go West (1-Nov-1925) · Friendless
Seven Chances (11-Mar-1925) · James Shannon
The Navigator (13-Oct-1924)
Sherlock, Jr. (21-Apr-1924) · Sherlock, Jr.
Our Hospitality (19-Nov-1923) · Willie McKay
The Three Ages (24-Sep-1923) · The Boy
The Balloonatic (22-Jan-1923)
Daydreams (Nov-1922) · The Young Man
The Blacksmith (21-Jul-1922)
My Wife’s Relations (May-1922)
The Paleface (Jan-1922) · Paleface
The Boat (10-Nov-1921)
The Goat (15-May-1921)
The High Sign (18-Apr-1921) · Buster
Neighbors (22-Dec-1920)
The Scarecrow (22-Dec-1920)
The Saphead (18-Oct-1920)
One Week (1-Sep-1920)
The Garage (15-Dec-1919)
The Cook (15-Sep-1918)
The Bell Boy (18-Mar-1918)
Out West (20-Jan-1918)
Oh Doctor! (30-Sep-1917)
The Butcher Boy (23-Apr-1917)

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Filed under: Uncategorized Tagged: 7 Chinese Brothers, Actor, Admiral Broadway Revue, All India Bakchod, Alvin and the Chipmunks, American Psychiatric Association, Angelina Jolie, Anna Karina, Buster Keaton, Caesar's Hour, California, Carmel Snow, Charlie Chaplin, Emmy Award, film, Hearst Castle, Los Angeles, Marion Davies, San Simeon

Happy 92nd Birthday Rock Hudson

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Today is the 92nd birthday of the legendary screen heartthrob Rock Hudson.  I once read a recount of how he got his gravely voice.  He was told by movie executives to go up into the mountains and scream until he lost his voice, this damaged his vocal cords in a way that left him with the very low voice he had for his entire career.  I am not sure if it is true, but it is crazy to think that someone would tell a person to do that.  With his legendary good looks and impressive resume of film credits behind him, he publicly announced he had AIDS to the world and took it from being a fringe disease that no one personally knew who had it to being on the cover of People Magazine.  The bravery at the end of his life is an example of true strength of character.  He propelled the image of AIDS mainstream, we all now knew someone with it, it became immediately personal for all of us.  The world is a better place because he was in it and still feels the loss that he has left.

rock-hudson-01

NAME: Rock Hudson
OCCUPATION: Film Actor
BIRTH DATE: November 17, 1925
DEATH DATE: October 02, 1985
PLACE OF BIRTH: Winnetka, Illinois
PLACE OF DEATH: Beverly Hills, California
ORIGINALLY: Roy Harold Scherer, Jr.
REMAINS: Cremated (ashes scattered at sea)
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME: 6104 Hollywood Blvd.

BEST KNOWN FOR: Rock Hudson was a leading man of the Hollywood screen in the 1950s and 1960s. His death from AIDS in 1985 greatly increased awareness of the disease.

Rock Hudson was born Roy Harold Scherer Jr. on November 17, 1925, in Winnetka, Illinois, and would go on to become an immensely popular actor, recognized widely for his good looks. During the Great Depression, His father, Roy Harold Scherer, lost his job as an auto mechanic and left the family. When Hudson was age 8, his mother, Katherine Wood, remarried and the actor took the surname of his stepfather, Wallace Fitzgerald. Growing up, Hudson did not excel academically, but had a certain charisma that made him popular among classmates.

In 1944, Rock Hudson joined the U.S. Navy and served in the Philippines. Shortly after his discharge in 1946, he decided to move to Hollywood, California, to pursue an acting career. While he found work as a truck driver, most of his free time was spent hanging around the studios and handing out headshots to studio executives. It’s not surprising that people soon began to take notice of the aspiring actor, with his good looks and charm.

 

In 1947, talent scout Henry Wilson took an interest in Hudson, taking the soon-to-be actor on as his protégé and crafting the moniker by which he’s now best known: “Rock” for the rock of Gibraltar, and “Hudson” for the Hudson River.

Hudson had no professional training as an actor, which proved a difficult feat to overcome. After a few setbacks, Hudson broke into the business, acquiring a contract with Warner Brothers and landing his first role in the feature film Fire Squadron. In 1948, Universal Pictures bought out Hudson’s contract with Warner Brothers and provided him with acting lessons.

Hudson went on to play bit roles in a number of films until he was hired as a lead in Douglas Sirk’s Magnificent Obsession. This film established Hudson as a star and his career, subsequently, began to skyrocket. He starred in several dramatic movies, including the critically acclaimed Giant (1956), which also starred heavy-hitters Elizabeth Taylor and James Dean. Hudson received an Academy Award nomination for his performance in the film.

A pivotal period for Hudson’s career came in 1959. He was cast opposite Doris Day in Pillow Talk, the first of a film series in which he portrayed the romantic lead. The dashing actor quickly became a heartthrob; women lusted after him and men wanted to be him. He paired with Day in a number of later films, including Lover Come Back (1961) and Send Me No Flowers (1964). In 1966, the actor took a chance and accepted a role that was well out of his now-normal spectrum: He starred in John Frankenheimer‘s Seconds, a sci-fi thriller that wasn’t well-received by audiences.

In 1971, Rock Hudson joined the cast of the popular television investigative series Macmillin and Wife. In the ’80s, he appeared on the show Dynasty.

Hudson married Phyllis Gates, an aspiring actress, in 1955. Unbeknownst to Phyllis, the marriage was arranged by her employer, Hudson’s agent, Henry Wilson, to keep up appearances. A gay man, Hudson was not outward about his homosexuality due to the social stigma surrounding the topic at the time; he feared that publicly discussing it would be negative for his career. The marriage lasted for only three years; while Hudson was in Italy filming 1957’s A Farewell to Arms, the couple divorced.

Throughout his career, Rock Hudson’s public image remained untarnished, but his private life was somewhat torturous. He had a number of homosexual lovers, but continued to keep his sexuality a secret.

In June 1984, Hudson went to visit a doctor about an irritation on his neck. The irritation turned out to be a lesion and a sign of Kaposi sarcoma, a cancerous tumor that affects AIDS patients. Rock Hudson was diagnosed with AIDS on June 5, 1984. A year later, on Jul 25, 1985, he publicly announced that he was suffering from the disease—becoming one of the first celebrities to do so, as well as one of the first to disclose his homosexuality. His openness was a catalyst for public awareness of the worldwide epidemic.

Hudson spent the remainder of his life surrounded by friends and family. He died from AIDS-related complications on October 2, 1985, at the age of 59, in Beverly Hills, California. He was the first major celebrity to die from an AIDS-related illness. Today, Rock Hudson is remembered not only for his legacy as a talented screen actor, but for his courageous choice to go public about his AIDS diagnosis.

TELEVISION
Dynasty Daniel Reece (1984-85)
The Devlin Connection Brian Devlin (1982)
McMillan and Wife Stewart McMillan (1971-76)

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
The Ambassador (23-May-1984)
World War III (31-Jan-1982)
The Mirror Crack’d (19-Dec-1980)
The Martian Chronicles (27-Jan-1980)
Avalanche (30-Aug-1978)
Embryo (21-May-1976)
Showdown (8-Jun-1973) · Chuck
Pretty Maids All in a Row (28-Apr-1971)
Hornets’ Nest (9-Sep-1970)
Darling Lili (24-Jun-1970)
The Undefeated (7-Nov-1969) · Col. James Langdon
A Fine Pair (10-May-1969)
Ice Station Zebra (23-Oct-1968) · Cmdr. James Ferraday
Tobruk (7-Feb-1967) · Maj. Craig
Seconds (5-Oct-1966)
Blindfold (23-Dec-1965)
A Very Special Favor (2-Aug-1965)
Strange Bedfellows (10-Feb-1965) · Carter
Send Me No Flowers (14-Oct-1964) · George
Man’s Favorite Sport (29-Jan-1964) · Roger Willoughby
A Gathering of Eagles (21-Jun-1963)
The Spiral Road (3-Aug-1962)
Lover Come Back (20-Dec-1961) · Jerry Webster
Come September (9-Aug-1961) · Robert Talbot
The Last Sunset (7-Jun-1961) · Dana Stribling
Pillow Talk (6-Oct-1959) · Brad Allen
This Earth is Mine (26-Jun-1959)
Twilight for the Gods (6-Aug-1958)
The Tarnished Angels (6-Jan-1958)
A Farewell to Arms (14-Dec-1957) · Lt. Frederick Henry
Something of Value (10-May-1957) · Peter McKenzie
Battle Hymn (14-Feb-1957) · Dean Hess
Written on the Wind (Dec-1956) · Mitch Wayne
Giant (10-Oct-1956) · Bick Benedict
Never Say Goodbye (10-Mar-1956)
All That Heaven Allows (7-Jan-1956) · Ron Kirby
Captain Lightfoot (18-Feb-1955)
One Desire (1955)
Bengal Brigade (6-Nov-1954)
Magnificent Obsession (4-Aug-1954)
Taza, Son of Cochise (18-Feb-1954) · Taza
Back to God’s Country (Nov-1953)
Gun Fury (30-Oct-1953) · Ben Warren
The Golden Blade (12-Aug-1953) · Harun
Sea Devils (Apr-1953)
Seminole (Mar-1953) · Lance Caldwell
The Lawless Breed (3-Jan-1953) · John Wesley Hardin
Horizons West (11-Oct-1952)
Has Anybody Seen My Gal? (4-Jul-1952)
Scarlet Angel (20-Jun-1952)
Here Come the Nelsons (23-Feb-1952) · Charlie Jones
Bend of the River (23-Jan-1952)
Iron Man (18-Aug-1951) · Speed O’Keefe
Bright Victory (16-Jul-1951) · Dudek
Air Cadet (14-Mar-1951)
Tomahawk (5-Feb-1951) · Burt Hanna
Shakedown (1-Sep-1950)
The Desert Hawk (5-Aug-1950)
Winchester ’73 (12-Jul-1950) · Young Bull
I Was a Shoplifter (27-Apr-1950)
Undertow (1-Dec-1949) · Detective

Author of books:
Rock Hudson: His Story (1986, biography)

Source: Rock Hudson – Wikipedia

Source: Rock Hudson – Film Actor – Biography.com

Source: Rock Hudson

Source: Rock Hudson – Rotten Tomatoes

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Happy 109th Birthday Imogene Coca

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Today is the 109th birthday of Imogene Coca.  There are a lot of people whose lives seem less remembered than others and less recognition is paid to their contributions than I feel is due to them.  I am sure that is why I started the “Style Icon” tag in the first place:  to remember and recognize the contributions that others made to society. Imogene Coca is one of the initial people I had in mind.  She is just perfection.  The world is a better place because she was in it and still feels the loss that she has left.

NAME: Emogeane Coca
BIRTHDATE: November 18, 1908
BIRTHPLACE: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S
DATE OF DEATH: June 2, 2001
LOCATION OF DEATH: Westport, Connecticut, U.S.
REMAINS: Cremated (ashes scattered)
BROADCASTING AND CABLE HALL OF FAME
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME 6256 Hollywood Blvd (television)

BEST KNOWN FOR: American comic actress best known for her role opposite Sid Caesar on Your Show of Shows.

Starting out in vaudeville as a child acrobat, she studied ballet and wished to have a serious career in music and dance, graduating to decades of stage musical revues, cabaret and summer stock. Finally in her 40s she began a celebrated career as a comedienne in television, starring in six series and guesting on successful television programs from the 1940s to the 1990s.

She was nominated for five Emmy awards for Your Show of Shows, winning Best Actress in 1951 and singled out for a Peabody Award for excellence in broadcasting in 1953. Coca was also nominated for a Tony Award in 1978 for On the Twentieth Century and received a sixth Emmy nomination at the age of 80 for an episode of Moonlighting.

She possessed a rubbery face capable of the broadest expressions—Life magazine compared her to Beatrice Lillie and Charlie Chaplin, and described her characterizations as taking “people or situations suspended in their own precarious balance between dignity and absurdity, and push(ing) them over the cliff with one single, pointed gesture”—the magazine noted a “particularly high-brow critic” as observing, “The trouble with most comedians who try to do satire is that they are essentially brash, noisy and indelicate people who have to use a sledge hammer to smash a butterfly. Miss Coca, on the other hand, is the timid woman who, when aroused, can beat a tiger to death with a feather.”

In addition to vaudeville, cabaret, theater and television, she appeared in film, voiced children’s cartoons and was even featured in an MTV video by a New Wave band, working well into her 80s. Twice a widow, Coca died in 2001.

In 1995 she was honored with the second annual Women in Film Lucy Award, honoring women’s achievement in television and named after Lucille Ball.

TELEVISION
Your Show of Shows Regular (1950-54)
It’s About Time Shadd (1966-67)

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Buy & Cell (1987)
Alice in Wonderland (9-Dec-1985)
Nothing Lasts Forever (Sep-1984)
National Lampoon’s Vacation (29-Jul-1983) · Aunt Edna
The Return of the Beverly Hillbillies (6-Oct-1981)
Rabbit Test (9-Apr-1978)
Under the Yum Yum Tree (23-Oct-1963) · Dorkus

Source: Imogene Coca – Wikipedia

Source: Imogene Coca, 92, Is Dead; a Partner in One of TV’s Most Successful Comedy Teams – The New York Times

Source: Imogene Coca | The Brady Bunch Wiki | Fandom powered by Wikia

Source: Imogene Coca

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Happy 82nd Birthday Diane Ladd

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Today is the 82nd Birthday of the amazing actress Diane Ladd. She has has a long career full of amazing work, but if you only see one film, see “Wild at Heart.”  You will want to see everything she has ever done. The world is a better place because she is in it.

diane-laddNAME: Diane Ladd
OCCUPATION: Film Actress
BIRTH DATE: November 29, 1935/1942
EDUCATION: Louisiana State University
PLACE OF BIRTH: Laurel, Mississippi
ORIGINALLY: Rose Diane Ladnier
GOLDEN GLOBE 1981 for Alice (television)
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME 6270 Hollywood Blvd. (2010)

BEST KNOWN FOR: Diane Lane is a Golden Globe–winning actress of films and TV and the mother of actress Laura Dern.

Diane Ladd  is an American actress, film director, producer and published author. She has appeared in over 120 roles, on television, and in miniseries and feature films, including Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore (1974), Wild at Heart (1990), Rambling Rose (1991), Ghosts of Mississippi, Primary Colors, 28 Days (2000), and American Cowslip (2008). Twice divorced and currently married, Ladd is the mother of actress Laura Dern by ex-husband actor Bruce Dern.

Ladd was born Rose Diane Ladner in Meridian, Mississippi in 1932, the only child of Mary Bernadette (née Anderson; August 15, 1912 – May 23, 2002), a housewife and actress, and Preston Paul Ladner (August 14, 1906 – April 1982), a poulterer. Ladd is a second cousin of playwright Tennessee Williams and is also related to poet Sidney Lanier.  Ladd was raised in the Roman Catholic faith of her mother.

Ladd was formerly married to actor and one-time co-star Bruce Dern from 1960–1969; the couple had two children, Diane Elizabeth Dern and actress Laura Elizabeth Dern. Diane died at 18 months from head injuries caused by falling into a swimming pool.  Ladd and Laura Dern co-starred in the films Wild at Heart and Rambling Rose.  They also appeared together in Inland Empire, another film by David Lynch.  They most recently have co-starred on the HBO series Enlightened. Ladd is now married to Robert Charles Hunter.

In 1971, Ladd joined the cast of the CBS soap opera, The Secret Storm.  She was the second actress to play the role of Kitty Styles on the long-running daytime serial.  She later had a supporting role in Roman Polanski’s 1974 film Chinatown, and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for her role as Flo in the film Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore.  That film inspired the TV series Alice, in which Flo was portrayed by Polly Holliday.  When Holliday left the TV series, Ladd succeeded her as waitress Isabelle “Belle” Dupree.  In 1993, Ladd appeared in the episode “Guess Who’s Coming to Chow?” of the CBS comedy/western series Harts of the West in the role of the mother of co-star Harley Jane Kozak. The 15-episode program, set on a dude ranch in Nevada starred Beau Bridges and Lloyd Bridges.

In 2004, Ladd played psychic Mrs. Druse in the television miniseries of Stephen King’s Kingdom Hospital. In April 2006, Ladd released her first book entitled: Spiraling Through The School Of Life: A Mental, Physical, and Spiritual Discovery. In 2007, she co-starred in the Lifetime Television film Montana Sky.

In addition to her Academy Award nomination for Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore, she was also nominated (again in the Best Actress in a Supporting Role category) for both Wild at Heart and Rambling Rose, both of which she starred alongside her daughter Laura Dern.  Dern received a nomination for Best Actress for Rambling Rose. The dual mother and daughter nominations for Ladd and Dern in Rambling Rose marked the first time in Academy Award history that such an event had occurred.  They were also nominated for dual Golden Globe Awards in the same year.

Ladd has worked in the theatre as well. She made her Broadway debut in the play Carry Me Back to Morningside Heights in 1968. In 1976 she starred in the play, A Texas Trilogy: Lu Ann Hampton Laverty Oberlander, for which she received a Drama Desk Award nomination.

TELEVISION
Enlightened Helen Jellicoe (2011-13)
Kingdom Hospital Sally Druse (2004)
Alice Belle Dupree (1980-81)
The Secret Storm Kitty Styles (1971-72)

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Joy (24-Dec-2015)
American Cowslip (24-Jul-2009) · Roe
Montana Sky (5-Feb-2007)
Inland Empire (6-Sep-2006)
Come Early Morning (2006)
The World’s Fastest Indian (10-Sep-2005) · Ada
Kingdom Hospital (3-Mar-2004)
Gracie’s Choice (12-Jan-2004)
Living with the Dead (28-Apr-2002)
Redemption of the Ghost (24-Feb-2002)
Daddy and Them (6-Jun-2001)
Aftermath (2001)
Can’t Be Heaven (5-Dec-2000) · Nona Gina
Christy: Return to Cutter Gap (19-Nov-2000)
28 Days (8-Feb-2000)
Sharing the Secret (2000)
Primary Colors (20-Mar-1998) · Mamma Stanton
The Westing Game (14-Sep-1997)
Breach of Faith: Family of Cops II (2-Feb-1997)
Ghosts of Mississippi (20-Dec-1996)
Cold Lazarus (26-May-1996)
The Siege at Ruby Ridge (19-May-1996)
Mother (Jan-1996)
Forever (15-Dec-1993)
Father Hood (27-Aug-1993) · Rita
Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me (30-Jul-1993)
Carnosaur (21-May-1993)
The Cemetery Club (3-Feb-1993)
Rambling Rose (10-Sep-1991)
Shadow of a Doubt (28-Apr-1991)
A Kiss Before Dying (26-Apr-1991) · Mrs. Corliss
The Lookalike (12-Dec-1990)
Wild at Heart (17-Aug-1990) · Marietta Fortune
National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation (1-Dec-1989) · Nora
Plain Clothes (15-Apr-1988) · Jane Melway
Bluegrass (28-Feb-1988)
Black Widow (6-Feb-1987) · Etta
Crime of Innocence (27-Oct-1985)
Something Wicked This Way Comes (29-Apr-1983)
All Night Long (6-Mar-1981)
Guyana Tragedy: The Story of Jim Jones (15-Apr-1980)
Embryo (21-May-1976)
Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore (9-Dec-1974) · Flo
Chinatown (20-Jun-1974) · Ida Sessions
White Lightning (22-Oct-1973)
The Steagle (15-Sep-1971)
Macho Callahan (17-Aug-1970)
Rebel Rousers (15-Jun-1970)
The Reivers (25-Dec-1969) · Phoebe
The Wild Angels (20-Jul-1966) · Gaysh

Source: Diane Ladd – Wikipedia

Source: Diane Ladd – Film Actress – Biography.com

Source: Diane Ladd

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Happy 117th Birthday Agnes Moorehead

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Today is Agnes Moorehead‘s 117th birthday.  Everyone loves her amazing over-the-top scenery-chewing performance as Endora on Bewitched. She was fierce before fierce was fierce. You should also watch her first film Citizen Kane and pay attention to her character:  simply perfection. Then, she stole focus in every scene in What’s the Matter With Helen? and Hush…Hush, Sweet Charlotte, she made you want to watch her every move, to not miss a second of her. She was in Pollyanna and Rain Tree County and Dark Passage (have you seen Dark Passage?  Amazing.)  She carved out a bigger-that-life life that no one has replicated.  The world is a better place because Agnes was in it and still feels the loss that she has left.

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NAME: Agnes Moorehead
BIRTH DATE: December 5, 1900
PLACE OF BIRTH: Clinton, Massachusetts, U.S.
DATE OF DEATH: April 30, 1974
PLACE OF DEATH: Rochester, Minnesota, U.S.
REMAINS: Dayton Memorial Park in Dayton, Ohio
EMMY 1967 for The Wild Wild West “Night of the Vicious Valentine”
GOLDEN GLOBE 1945 for Mrs. Parkington
GOLDEN GLOBE 1965 for Hush… Hush, Sweet Charlotte
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME 1719 Vine St. (motion pictures)
ST. LOUIS WALK OF FAME

BEST KNOWN FOR: Agnes Robertson Moorehead was an American actress whose career of six decades included work in radio, stage, film, and television. She is chiefly known for her role as Endora on the television series Bewitched.

Agnes Robertson Moorehead was an American actress. Although she began with the Mercury Theatre, appeared in more than seventy films beginning with Citizen Kane and on dozens of television shows during a career that spanned more than thirty years, Moorehead is most widely known to modern audiences for her role as the witch Endora in the series Bewitched.

 

While rarely playing leads in films, Moorehead’s skill at character development and range earned her one Emmy Award and two Golden Globe awards in addition to four Academy Award and six Emmy Award nominations. Moorehead’s transition to television won acclaim for drama and comedy. She could play many different types, but often portrayed haughty, arrogant characters.

Moorehead died of uterine cancer on April 30, 1974 in Rochester, Minnesota. Her mother, Mary M. Moorehead (August 25, 1883 – June 8, 1990) survived her by 16 years, dying at the age of 106 in 1990.

Moorehead appeared in the movie The Conqueror (1956), which was shot near St. George, Utah — downwind from the Yucca Flat, Nevada nuclear test site. She was one of over 90 (of 220) cast and crew members–including costars Susan Hayward, John Wayne, and Pedro Armendariz, as well as director-producer Dick Powell — who, over their lifetimes, all developed cancer; at least 46 from cast and crew have since died from cancer, including all of those named above. No bombs were tested during the actual filming of The Conqueror, but 11 explosions occurred the year before. Two of them were particularly “dirty,” depositing long-lasting radiation over the area. The 51.5-kiloton shot code-named “Simon” was fired on April 25, 1953, and the 32.4-kiloton blast “Harry” went off May 19. (In contrast, the bomb dropped on Hiroshima was 13 kilotons.) “Fallout was very abundant more than a year after Harry,” says Dr. Pendleton, a former AEC researcher. “Some of the isotopes, such as strontium 90 and cesium 137, would not have diminished much.” Pendleton points out that radioactivity can concentrate in “hot spots” such as the rolling dunes of Snow Canyon, a natural reservoir for windblown material. It was the place where much of The Conqueror was filmed. Pendleton also notes that radioactive substances enter the food chain. By eating local meat and produce, the Conqueror cast and crew were increasing their risk. Says Dr. Robert C. Pendleton, director of radiological health at the University of Utah stated, “With these numbers, this case could qualify as an epidemic. The connection between fallout radiation and cancer in individual cases has been practically impossible to prove conclusively. But in a group this size you’d expect only 30-some cancers to develop. With 91, I think the tie-in to their exposure on the set of The Conqueror would hold up even in a court of law.”

Agnes was one of the first members of the company to make a connection between the film and the fallout. Her close friend Sandra Gould, who was featured with her on Bewitched, recalls that long before Moorehead developed the uterine cancer that killed her in 1974, she recounted rumors of “some radioactive germs” on location in Utah, observing:

“Everybody in that picture has gotten cancer and died.” As she was dying, she reportedly said: “I should never have taken that part.”

TELEVISION
Bewitched Endora (1964-72)

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Frankenstein: The True Story (30-Nov-1973)
Charlotte’s Web (22-Feb-1973) [VOICE]
Dear Dead Delilah (1972)
What’s the Matter with Helen? (30-Jun-1971) · Sister Alma
The Ballad of Andy Crocker (18-Nov-1969)
The Singing Nun (17-Mar-1966) · Sister Cluny
Hush… Hush, Sweet Charlotte (15-Dec-1964) · Velma
Who’s Minding the Store? (28-Nov-1963) · Mrs. Phoebe Tuttle
How the West Was Won (1-Nov-1962) · Rebecca Prescott
Jessica (19-Apr-1962) · Maria Lombardo
Bachelor in Paradise (1-Nov-1961) · Judge Peterson
Twenty Plus Two (13-Aug-1961)
Pollyanna (19-May-1960)
The Bat (9-Aug-1959) · Cornelia Van Gorder
Night of the Quarter Moon (4-Mar-1959)
Tempest (1-Dec-1958)
The Story of Mankind (8-Nov-1957) · Queen Elizabeth I
Raintree County (4-Oct-1957) · Ellen Shawnessy
Jeanne Eagels (2-Aug-1957)
The True Story of Jesse James (Feb-1957) · Mrs. Samuel
The Opposite Sex (26-Oct-1956) · Countess
Pardners (25-Jul-1956)
The Revolt of Mamie Stover (11-May-1956)
The Swan (26-Apr-1956) · Queen Maria Dominika
Meet Me in Las Vegas (9-Mar-1956) · Miss Hattie
The Conqueror (21-Feb-1956)
All That Heaven Allows (7-Jan-1956) · Sara Warren
The Left Hand of God (21-Sep-1955) · Beryl Sigman
Untamed (1-Mar-1955)
Magnificent Obsession (4-Aug-1954)
Those Redheads from Seattle (16-Oct-1953) · Mrs. Edmonds
Main Street to Broadway (13-Oct-1953)
Scandal at Scourie (17-May-1953) · Sister Josephine
The Story of Three Loves (5-Mar-1953)
The Blue Veil (26-Oct-1951)
Show Boat (13-Jul-1951) · Parthy Hawks
Adventures of Captain Fabian (21-Mar-1951)
Fourteen Hours (6-Mar-1951)
Caged (19-May-1950) · Ruth Benton
Captain Blackjack (1950)
Without Honor (26-Oct-1949)
The Great Sinner (29-Jun-1949) · Emma Getzel
The Stratton Story (12-May-1949)
Johnny Belinda (14-Sep-1948) · Aggie McDonald
Station West (1-Sep-1948)
The Woman in White (7-May-1948) · Countess Fosco
Summer Holiday (23-Feb-1948) · Cousin Lily
The Lost Moment (21-Nov-1947) · Juliana Borderau
Dark Passage (5-Sep-1947) · Madge Rapf
Our Vines Have Tender Grapes (6-Sep-1945) · Bruna Jacobson
Her Highness and the Bellboy (11-Jul-1945) · Countess Zoe
Keep Your Powder Dry (8-Mar-1945) · Lt. Col. Spottiswoode
Tomorrow, the World! (29-Dec-1944) · Jessie Frame
Mrs. Parkington (12-Oct-1944) · Aspasia Conti
The Seventh Cross (24-Jul-1944) · Mme. Marelli
Since You Went Away (20-Jul-1944) · Emily Hawkins
Dragon Seed (18-Jul-1944) · Third Cousin’s Wife
Jane Eyre (7-Apr-1944) · Mrs. Reed
Government Girl (5-Nov-1943) · Adele
The Youngest Profession (26-Feb-1943) · Miss Featherstone
The Big Street (13-Aug-1942) · Violette Shumberg
Journey Into Fear (7-Aug-1942) · Mrs. Mathews
The Magnificent Ambersons (10-Jul-1942) · Fanny
Citizen Kane (1-May-1941) · Mary Kane

Source: Agnes Moorehead

Source: Agnes Moorehead – Wikipedia

Source: From the Archives: Agnes Moorehead, Character Actress of Movies and TV, Dies – LA Times

Source: Bewitched Beography on Agnes Moorehead – Bewitched @ Harpies Bizarre

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Happy 92nd Birthday Dick Van Dyke

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NAME: Dick Van Dyke
OCCUPATION: Film Actor, Television Actor, Comedian, Writer
BIRTH DATE: December 13, 1925
PLACE OF BIRTH: West Plains, Missouri
EMMY 1964 for The Dick Van Dyke Show
EMMY 1965 for The Dick Van Dyke Show
EMMY 1966 for The Dick Van Dyke Show
EMMY 1977 for Van Dyke and Company (shared)
GRAMMY Mary Poppins soundtrack
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME 1992 at 7021 Hollywood Blvd.
TONY for Bye-Bye Birdie

BEST KNOWN FOR: Dick Van Dyke is an American actor and comedian best known for hosting The Dick Van Dyke Show. He’s also known for starring on Diagnosis Murder and for roles in films like Mary Poppins, Dick Tracy and Night at the Museum.

By high school Dick Van Dyke knew he wanted to be on stage, but he was unsure whether he wanted to be an actor or a Presbyterian minister. After a stint in the Army Air Corps, he worked in advertising, then became a radio announcer, and within a few years he was hosting a TV talk show in New Orleans. His big break came when he was hired to replace Johnny Carson as host of CBS’s Monday-Friday The Morning Show in 1955.

The Morning Show was of course flattened in the ratings by Dave Garroway‘s Today Show. After the program was cancelled Van Dyke was still under contract to CBS, but the network was unsure what to do with him. He found himself hosting CBS Cartoon Theater for kids, then playing sidekick to singer Andy Williams in The Chevy Showroom, and he was a frequent panelist on To Tell the Truth while it was on CBS. Van Dyke’s best early reviews came for two appearances onThe Phil Silvers Show in 1957 and 1958.

When his CBS contract ended, Van Dyke hosted two quickly-cancelled game shows, Mother’s Dayand the comedy-themed Laugh Line, which featured regular panelists Mike Nichols and Elaine May. On Broadway, he appeared in the musical review The Girls Against the Boys with an ancientBert Lahr and a young Nancy Walker. The play ran only two weeks, but Van Dyke won a Theater World Award for his performance. In 1960, he won a Tony starring in the hit Bye Bye Birdie, as a rock’n’roll singer drafted into the military.

Meanwhile, unbeknownst to Van Dyke, comedian Carl Reiner had created, written and starred in a pilot for an autobiographical sitcom, Head of the Family. Reiner had scripted comedy for TV pioneer Sid Caesar, and in the pilot he played a comedy writer for a Caesar-like TV star. Network executives liked the script and concept, but thought Reiner was wrong for the role of, basically, himself. So the show was retooled with Van Dyke as comedy writer Rob Petrie, the young Mary Tyler Moore as his wife, Rose Marie and Morey Amsterdam as Van Dyke’s fellow comedy writers, and a small supporting role for Reiner as the Van Dyke character’s obnoxious boss. Of course, Van Dyke was perfect in the role, sometimes tripping over the ottoman and sometimes sidestepping it, as The Dick Van Dyke Show became one of America’s most enduring comedies.

His first film was an adaptation of his Broadway hit Bye Bye Birdie, but with the script rewritten to shortchange his character and instead spotlight Ann-Margret. His most successful film was Mary Poppins with Julie Andrews, but his attempt at a British cockney accent was so awful, the term “Van Dyke accent” is still used to describe failed American attempts to sound British. His other films include The Comic, a drama about comedy with Mickey Rooney; Cold Turkey, a comedy about nicotine withdrawal with Edward Everett Horton; the charming children’s musical Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (based on Ian Fleming‘s non-Bond novel); and Warren Beatty‘s Dick Tracy, where Van Dyke played a delightfully corrupt district attorney.

He made several attempts to recapture the magic of his Dick Van Dyke Show on TV, and occasionally came close. In the early 1970s he starred in The New Dick Van Dyke Show with Hope Lange as his wife, and the program had its moments — most hilariously in an episode where Van Dyke’s character was in a quandary about attending an awards dinner at a whites-only nightclub. He hosted a short-lived variety show in 1976, Van Dyke and Company, with the expected skits and songs, but the show also featured Van Dyke’s endearing and genuinely funny pantomime segments, and provided Americans’ first prime time glimpse of Andy Kaufman, who stole every segment he was in. In the late-1980s comedy The Van Dyke Show, he played a retired Broadway star who amusingly made life miserable for his son, played by Van Dyke’s real-life son Barry Van Dyke.

Van Dyke has often said that his favorite comic was Stan Laurel, and like Laurel he had exquisite timing, an innate likability on-screen, a rubber face, and a mastery of pratfalls and slapstick. Van Dyke rarely wrote his own material while Laurel wrote more than a dozen of Laurel & Hardy‘s best films, but as a performer Van Dyke may have been Laurel’s equal. Van Dyke and Laurel once met, in the early 1960s, while The Dick Van Dyke Show was growing very popular. Shaking his hero’s hand, he told Laurel his work had inspired him, and that he had honed his comedy technique from watching Laurel’s films. According to Van Dyke, Laurel chuckled and said, “I’ve noticed that.”

It is sad, then, that younger audiences probably know Van Dyke only from his last long-running series, Diagnosis: Murder. Abandoning comedy, he played it straight as Dr Mark Sloan, a folksy doctor who solved murders in his spare time. He had first played Sloan in a 1991 episode of Jake and the Fatman, and the character was resurrected in three made-for-TV movies before the series was launched in 1993. A rather stilted clone of Angela Lansbury‘s Murder, She Wrote, Diagnosis: Murder inexplicably ran for eight seasons, co-starring Van Dyke’s son Barry as Dr Sloan’s son Steve, supposedly an LAPD detective.

Van Dyke has spent his recent years in the company of Michelle Triola, who was famous for suing her former lover Lee Marvin, demanding and winning alimony — “palimony” — although they had never married. His brother is comedic actor Jerry Van Dyke, a sitcom staple who starred in the anti-classic My Mother the Car and had a supporting role on Coach with Craig T. Nelson. Van Dyke’s son, as noted above, is wooden actor Barry Van Dyke, whose best-known work withoutsharing the screen with his father was Galactica 1980, a short-lived revival of Battlestar Galacticawith Lorne Greene.

TELEVISION
Diagnosis Murder Dr. Mark Sloan (1993-2001)
The Carol Burnett Show various (1977)
The New Dick Van Dyke Show Dick Preston (1971-74)
The Dick Van Dyke Show Rob Petrie (1961-66)

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb (17-Dec-2014)
The Boys: The Sherman Brothers’ Story (24-Apr-2009) · Himself
Murder 101: New Age (14-Jan-2008)
Murder 101: If Wishes Were Horses (9-Aug-2007)
Murder 101: College Can Be Murder (29-Jan-2007)
Night at the Museum (21-Dec-2006)
Curious George (10-Feb-2006) [VOICE]
Murder 101 (7-Jan-2006)
The Gin Game (4-May-2003)
Dick Tracy (15-Jun-1990) · D.A. Fletcher
Drop-Out Father (27-Sep-1982)
The Runner Stumbles (16-Nov-1979)
The Morning After (13-Feb-1974)
Cold Turkey (19-Feb-1971) · Rev. Clayton Brooks
The Comic (19-Nov-1969)
Some Kind of a Nut (1-Oct-1969) · Fred
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (16-Dec-1968) · Caractacus Potts
Never a Dull Moment (26-Jun-1968)
Fitzwilly (20-Dec-1967) · Fitzwilliam
Divorce American Style (21-Jun-1967) · Richard Harmon
Lt. Robin Crusoe, U.S.N. (29-Jun-1966)
The Art of Love (30-Jun-1965)
Mary Poppins (27-Aug-1964)
What a Way to Go! (12-May-1964) · Edgar Hopper
Bye Bye Birdie (4-Apr-1963) · Albert Peterson

Source: Dick Van Dyke

Source: Dick Van Dyke – Wikipedia

Source: The Dick Van Dyke Show – Wikipedia

Source: Dick Van Dyke – Film Actor, Television Actor, Comedian, Writer – Biography.com

Happy 81st Birthday Mary Tyler Moore

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Today is the 81st birthday of the actress and activist Mary Tyler Moore. I love all the reruns of The Dick Van Dyke and The Mary Tyler Moore show, I remember seeing that MTM logo and knowing that I was going to like the show. The world is a better place because she is in it.

mary-tyler-moore-03

NAME: Mary Tyler Moore
OCCUPATION: Actress
BIRTH DATE: December 29, 1936
PLACE OF BIRTH: Brooklyn, New York
DEATH DATE: January 25, 2017
PLACE OF DEATH: Greenwich, Connecticut
HEIGHT: 5′ 7″
SPOUSE: Robert Levine (m. 1983), Grant Tinker (m. 1962–1981), Richard Carleton Meeker (m. 1955–1961)
CHILDREN: Richie Meeker
BROADCASTING AND CABLE HALL OF FAME
EMMY 1964 for The Dick Van Dyke Show
EMMY 1966 for The Dick Van Dyke Show
EMMY 1973 for Mary Tyler Moore
EMMY 1974 for Mary Tyler Moore
EMMY 1976 for Mary Tyler Moore
EMMY 1993 for Stolen Babies
GOLDEN GLOBE 1965 for The Dick Van Dyke Show
GOLDEN GLOBE 1971 for Mary Tyler Moore
GOLDEN GLOBE 1981 for Ordinary People
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME 7021 Hollywood Blvd. (television)

BEST KNOWN FOR: Mary Tyler Moore is an Emmy and Tony Award-winning actress, television star and producer known for her roles on The Dick Van Dyke Show and The Mary Tyler Moore Show.

Actress Mary Tyler Moore was born on December 29, 1936, in Brooklyn, New York to George Tyler Moore, who worked as a clerk, and Marjorie Hackett Moore. She was the eldest of three children and was raised in the Catholic faith. Her family moved from New York to Los Angeles when she was eight years old, and she began acting and dancing while in high school.

You can’t be brave if you’ve only had wonderful things happen to you.

She got her start in show business as a dancer in commercials, playing the part of a home appliance known as “Happy Hotpoint” in the mid-1950s. Moore also found work as chorus dancer in television variety shows, and in 1959 landed a role in the TV drama Richard Diamond, Private Detective, playing Sam, a glamorous secretary whose face was never shown, but was represented by her shapely legs. She made several guest appearances in television shows including Johnny Staccato, Bachelor Father, The Tab Hunter Show, 77 Sunset Strip, Surfside 6, Hawaiian Eye, and Lock-Up.

She made her film debut in 1961 in X-15, an aviation drama starring David McLean and Charles Bronson.

Moore became a household name in 1961 when she landed the role of Laura Petrie, one of television’s most beloved wives on The Dick Van Dyke Show, created by Carl Reiner and starring Dick Van Dyke. As charming Laura Petrie, Moore showed off her flair for comedy and won Emmys in 1964 and 1966 for her work.

After the show ended in 1966, Moore focused on making movie musicals, including Thoroughly Modern Millie (1967), where she played an aspiring actress opposite Julie Andrews, and Change of Habit (1970), starring as nun who falls in love with a doctor, played by Elvis Presley, as she prepares to take her vows. She also played a dramatic role in the television thriller Run A Crooked Mile (1969), starring opposite Louis Jourdan.

Moore didn’t have another hit until her return to television, starring in her own show The Mary Tyler Moore Show in 1970. She not only starred in the series, but produced it with her second husband Grant Tinker through their company MTM Enterprises. The show became a cultural phenomenon, tapping into changing attitudes about women in the workplace. Moore played television producer Mary Richards, one of the first female television characters to be a successful single woman. The TV comedy followed Mary’s personal and professional life at WJM-TV in Minneapolis, and also featured Ed Asner, Gavin MacLeod, Ted Knight, Betty White, Valerie Harper and Cloris Leachman.

Moore won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Continued Performance by an Actress in 1973, 1974 and 1976 for the show, which aired it’s final episode in 1977. In addition to The Mary Tyler Moore Show, her company produced a number of other popular television programs, including The Bob Newhart Show (1972-78), Taxi (1978-1982), Hill Street Blues (1981-87), Remington Steele (1982-87), Cheers (1982-1993) and spin-offs from The Mary Tyler Moore Show including Rhoda (1974-78), Phyllis (1975-77), and The Lou Grant Show (1977-1982).

Moore made several attempts to return to television, including Mary (1978) and New York News (1995), but these shows did not catch on with television audiences. Moore continued to have success in other acting endeavors. She won a Tony Award for her performance in Whose Life Is It Anyway? (1980) on Broadway. That year, Moore also received an Academy Award nomination for her portrayal of an emotionally guarded mother in Ordinary People, directed by Robert Redford.

She appeared in the television movies First, You Cry (1978), Heartsounds (1984), Finnegan Begin Again (1985), Lincoln (1988), playing Mary Todd Lincoln and Stolen Babies (1993), for which she earned another Emmy Award. In 1996, she returned to big screen comedy playing the adoptive mother of Ben Stiller‘s character in Flirting with Disaster (1996), directed by David O. Russell.

Mary Tyler Moore has been married three times. She married Ricard Meeker in 1955 and they have a son, Richard, who was born the following year. After they split, she then married television executive Grant Tinker from 1962 until their divorce in 1981. Tragedy struck the family when her son Richard died from an accidental self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1980. In 1983, she married Robert Levine, a doctor who had treated her mother.

During her life, Moore has struggled with alcoholism, a disease her mother also battled, and not long after she married Levine, she checked herself in to the Betty Ford Clinic for treatment. When she was in her early thirties, Moore was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes. She has become a well-known spokesperson and international advocate for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.

In recent years, Moore’s battled complications of the diabetes including kidney and heart problems, and it has been reported recently that she’s lost much of her eyesight as a result of the disease. In 2011, she faced another health challenge when she had a benign tumor removed from her brain.

An animal lover and vegetarian, Moore also has been an activist with Farm Sanctuary, and she and Bernadette Peters co-founded Broadway Barks in 1999. The group organizes an annual event with Broadway stars to promote pet adoptions from shelters.

TELEVISION
The Naked Truth Catherine Wilde (1997)
Mary Mary Brenner (1985-86)
Rhoda Mary Richards (1974-77)
The Mary Tyler Moore Show Mary Richards (1970-77)
The Dick Van Dyke Show Laura Petrie (1961-66)

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Against the Current (18-Jan-2009) · Mom
Snow Wonder (20-Nov-2005)
The Gin Game (4-May-2003)
Cheats (11-Nov-2002)
Labor Pains (7-Nov-2000) · Esther
Mary and Rhoda (7-Feb-2000)
Keys to Tulsa (20-Mar-1997)
Payback (10-Feb-1997)
Flirting with Disaster (22-Mar-1996) · Mrs. Coplin
The Last Best Year (4-Nov-1990)
Lincoln (27-Mar-1988)
Just Between Friends (21-Mar-1986) · Holly Davis
Finnegan Begin Again (24-Feb-1985)
Heartsounds (30-Sep-1984)
Six Weeks (24-Dec-1982)
Ordinary People (19-Sep-1980) · Beth
First, You Cry (8-Nov-1978)
Change of Habit (10-Nov-1969) · Sister Michelle
Don’t Just Stand There! (4-Sep-1968)
What’s So Bad About Feeling Good? (17-May-1968)
Thoroughly Modern Millie (21-Mar-1967) · Miss Dorothy
X-15 (22-Dec-1961)

Author of books:
After All (1995)

Source: Mary Tyler Moore

Source: Mary Tyler Moore – Wikipedia

Source: Mary Tyler Moore – Actress – Biography.com

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Happy 81st Birthday Dyan Cannon

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Today is the 81st birthday of the actress and Seattle girl made good: Dyan Cannon. Author! Author! is my favorite film of hers, she is just so natural, so effortless (which actually takes a lot of unnatural effort to achieve). She also happens to be the mother of Cary Grant’s only child, which seals her Hollywood royalty status forever. The world is a better place because she is in it.

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NAME: Dyan Cannon
DATE OF BIRTH: January 4, 1937
PLACE OF BIRTH: Tacoma, WA
HEIGHT: 5’5”
MISS WEST SEATTLE:  1955
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME:  6608 Hollywood Boulevard

BEST KNOWN FOR: Dyan Cannon is an American film and television actress, director, screenwriter, editor, and producer. She has been nominated for three Academy Awards.

Cannon was born Samille Diane Friesen in the state of Washington in 1937. Her mother, Claire (née Portnoy), was a housewife, and her father, Ben Friesen, sold life insurance. Cannon was raised in the Jewish faith of her mother, who had emigrated from Russia; Dyan’s father was Baptist. She attended West Seattle High School. Her younger brother is jazz bassist David Friesen.

Cannon made her film debut in 1960 in The Rise and Fall of Legs Diamond; she had appeared on television since the late 1950s, including a guest appearance on Bat Masterson as Mary Lowery in the 1959 episode entitled “Lady Luck” and again as Diane Jansen in “The Price of Paradise”. She made another guest appearance in 1959 on CBS’s Wanted: Dead or Alive starring Steve McQueen in episode 54 “Vanishing Act” as Nicole McCready. About this time, she also appeared on another CBS western, Johnny Ringo, starring Don Durant, and on Jack Lord’s ABC western adventure drama, Stoney Burke. She also appeared on an episode of Hawaiian Eye, using her name Diane Cannon, in 1961, opposite Tracey Steele, Robert Conrad, and Connie Stevens.

In 1963, Cannon joined the national touring production of the Broadway musical How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying in which she played Rosemary.

She portrayed Mona Elliott, with fellow guest star Franchot Tone, in the episode “The Man Behind the Man” of the 1964 CBS drama series The Reporter, with Harry Guardino in the title role. She also made guest appearances on 77 Sunset Strip, the perennial western series Gunsmoke, The Untouchables, the 1960 episode of the syndicated series Two Faces West entitled “Sheriff of the Town” and the 1962 Ripcord episode called “The Helicopter Race”.

Cannon’s first major film role came in 1969’s Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, which earned her Academy Award and Golden Globe nominations. In 1971 she starred in five films: The Love Machine, Doctors’ Wives, The Anderson Tapes with Sean Connery, The Burglars, and Such Good Friends, for which she received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress. Cannon starred opposite Burt Reynolds in Shamus (1973) as well as the mystery The Last of Sheila that year, and gave a critically acclaimed performance in Child Under a Leaf in 1974.

She became the first Oscar-nominated actress to be nominated in the Best Short Film, Live Action Category for Number One (1976), a project which Cannon produced, directed, wrote and edited. It was a story about adolescent sexual curiosity. In 1978, Cannon co-starred in Revenge of the Pink Panther. That same year, she appeared in Heaven Can Wait, for which she received another Oscar nomination and won a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress.

In 1976, she hosted Saturday Night Live during its first season. She was a guest in the fourth season of The Muppet Show in 1979.

In the 1980s, Cannon, who is also a singer/songwriter, appeared in Honeysuckle Rose (1980) with Willie Nelson, Author! Author! with Al Pacino, Deathtrap (1982) with Christopher Reeve and Michael Caine, Caddyshack II (1988), as well as several made-for-TV movies.

In the 1990s, she appeared on the popular television shows Diagnosis: Murder and The Practice, as well as being a semi-regular on Ally McBeal. She made appearances in films such as That Darn Cat (1997), 8 Heads in a Duffel Bag (1997), and Out to Sea (1997) with Walter Matthau and Jack Lemmon. In 2005, she appeared in Boynton Beach Club, a movie about aging Floridians who have just lost their spouses.

On July 22, 1965, she married actor Cary Grant, who was 33 years her senior. They had one daughter, Jennifer (born February 26, 1966), who also is an actress. They were divorced on March 21, 1968. In 1972, she told an interviewer that she was involved in Primal therapy. Cannon married real estate investor Stanley Fimberg in 1985. They divorced in 1991.

She is an avid fan of the Los Angeles Lakers and has attended Lakers games for over thirty years.

TELEVISION
Three Sisters Honey Bernstein-Flynn (2001-02)
Ally McBeal Whipper Cone (1997-2000)
Ally Whipper Cone (1999)

FILMOGRAPHY AS DIRECTOR
The End of Innocence (10-Sep-1990)

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
The Boynton Beach Club (21-Oct-2005) · Lois
Kangaroo Jack (11-Jan-2003) · Anna Carbone
My Mother, the Spy (2000)
Diamond Girl (13-Jun-1998)
Beverly Hills Family Robinson (11-Apr-1998)
Out to Sea (2-Jul-1997)
8 Heads in a Duffel Bag (18-Apr-1997) · Annette Bennett
That Darn Cat (14-Feb-1997) · Mrs. Flint
The Sender (1997)
Based on an Untrue Story (20-Sep-1993)
The Pickle (30-Apr-1993)
Christmas in Connecticut (13-Apr-1992)
The End of Innocence (10-Sep-1990)
Caddyshack II (22-Jul-1988) · Elizabeth Pearce
Jenny’s War (3-Jun-1985)
Author! Author! (18-Jun-1982) · Alice Detroit
Deathtrap (19-Mar-1982) · Myra Bruhl
Coast to Coast (3-Oct-1980)
Honeysuckle Rose (18-Jul-1980)
Lady of the House (14-Nov-1978)
Revenge of the Pink Panther (14-Jul-1978) · Simone
Heaven Can Wait (28-Jun-1978)
The Last of Sheila (14-Jun-1973)
Shamus (31-Jan-1973)
Such Good Friends (21-Dec-1971)
Le Casse (4-Dec-1971) · Lena
The Love Machine (14-Aug-1971)
The Anderson Tapes (17-Jun-1971) · Ingrid
Doctors’ Wives (3-Feb-1971)
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (18-Sep-1969) · Alice
This Rebel Breed (19-Mar-1960)
The Rise and Fall of Legs Diamond (3-Feb-1960) · Dixie

Author of books:
Dear Cary: My Life with Cary Grant (2011)

Source: Dyan Cannon – Wikipedia

Source: Dyan Cannon

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Happy 106th Birthday Jackson Pollock

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Today is the 106th birthday of Jackson Pollock.  Some of his art pushes some people’s definitions of art because they do not see it as a representation of anything they recognize.  Fortunately, the definition of art is not if someone can see a red barn on a grassy hill in it.  His art elicits emotions, questions and wonder; it draws the viewer in, blurs the periphery and creates a pure experience.  The world is a better place because he was in it and still feels the loss that he has left.

NAME: Jackson Pollock
OCCUPATION: Painter
BIRTH DATE: January 28, 1912
DEATH DATE: August 11, 1956
PLACE OF BIRTH: Cody, Wyoming
PLACE OF DEATH: East Hampton, New York
FULL NAME: Paul Jackson Pollock
REMAINS: Buried, Green River Cemetery, East Hampton, NY

BEST KNOWN FOR: Famous 20th century artist Jackson Pollock revolutionized the world of modern art with his unique abstract painting techniques.

Paul Jackson Pollock was born on January 28, 1912 in Cody, Wyoming. His father, LeRoy Pollock, was a farmer and a government land surveyor, and his mother, Stella May McClure, was a fierce woman with artistic ambitions. The youngest of five brothers, he was a needy child and was often in search of attention that he did not receive.

During his youth, Pollock’s family moved around the West, to Arizona and throughout California. When Pollock was 8, his father, who was an abusive alcoholic, left the family, and Pollock’s older brother, Charles, became like a father to him. Charles was an artist, and was considered to be the best in the family. He had a significant influence on his younger brother’s future ambitions. While the family was living in Los Angeles, Pollock enrolled in the Manual Arts High School, where he learned to draw but had little success expressing himself. He was eventually expelled for starting fights.

In 1930, at age 18, Pollock moved to New York City to live with his brother, Charles. He soon began studying with Charles’s art teacher, representational regionalist painter Thomas Hart Benton. Pollock spent much of his time with Benton, often babysitting Benton’s young son, and the Bentons eventually became like the family Pollock felt he never had.

When Pollock’s father died suddenly in 1933, he fell into a deep depression. He got drunk one night and started a fight with Charles’s wife, Elizabeth. During the fight, Pollock threatened her with an ax, and then turned around and sliced through one of his brothe’’s paintings, which had been scheduled for an upcoming exhibition. Pollock was forced to leave Charles’s house, and in 1934, his brother Sanford arrived in New York to help take care of him.

During the Depression, President Franklin D. Roosevelt started a program called the Public Works of Art Project, one of many intended to jumpstart the economy. Artists such as Pollock were given $24.86 to do 20 hours of work a week. The program resulted in thousands of works of art by Pollock and contemporaries such as José Clemente Orozco, Willem de Kooning and Mark Rothko.

But despite being busy with work, Pollock could not stop drinking. In 1937, he began receiving psychiatric treatment for alcoholism from a Jungian analyst who fueled his interest in symbolism and Native American art. In 1939, Pollock discovered Pablo Picasso‘s show at the Museum of Modern Art. Picasso’s artistic experimentation encouraged Pollock to push the boundaries of his own work.

“Abstract painting is abstract. It confronts you. There was a reviewer a while back who wrote that my pictures didn’t have any beginning or any end. He didn’t mean it as a compliment, but it was.”

In 1942, Pollock met Lee Krasner, a Jewish contemporary artist and an established painter in her own right, at a party. She later visited Pollock at his studio and was impressed with his art. They soon became romantically involved.

Around this time, Peggy Guggenheim began expressing interest in Pollock’s paintings. During a meeting she had with the painter Pete Norman, he saw some of Pollock’s paintings lying on the floor and commented that Pollock’s art was possibly the most original American art he had seen. Guggenheim immediately put Pollock on contract.

Krasner and Pollock married in October 1945, and with the help of a $2,000 loan from Guggenheim, bought a farmhouse in the Springs area of East Hampton, on Long Island. Guggenheim gave Pollock a stipend to work, and Krasner dedicated her time to helping promote and manage his artwork. Pollock was happy to be in the country again, surrounded by nature, which had a major impact on his projects. He was energized by his new surroundings and by his supportive wife. In 1946, he converted the barn to a private studio, where he continued to develop his “drip” technique, the paint literally flowing off of his tools and onto the canvases that he typically placed on the floor.

In 1947, Guggenheim turned Pollock over to Betty Parsons, who was not able to pay him a stipend but would give him money as his artwork sold.

Pollock’s most famous paintings were made during this “drip period” between 1947 and 1950. He became wildly popular after being featured in a four-page spread, on August 8, 1949, in Life magazine. The article asked of Pollock, “Is he the greatest living painter in the United States?” The Life article changed Pollock’s life overnight. Many other artists resented his fame, and some of his friends suddenly became competitors. As his fame grew, some critics began calling Pollock a fraud, causing even him to question his own work. During this time he would often look to Krasner to determine which paintings were good, unable to make the differentiation himself.

In 1949, Pollock’s show at the Betty Parsons Gallery sold out, and he suddenly became the best-paid avant-garde painter in America. But fame was not good for Pollock, who, as a result of it, became dismissive of other artists, even his former teach and mentor, Thomas Hart Benton. Furthermore, acts of self-promotion made him feel like a phony, and he would sometimes give interviews in which his answers were scripted. When Hans Namuth, a documentary photographer, began producing a film of Pollock working, Pollock found it impossible to “perform” for the camera. Instead, he went back to drinking heavily.

Pollock’s 1950 show at the Parsons gallery did not sell, though many of the paintings included, such as his “Number 4, 1950,” are considered masterpieces today. It was during this time that Pollock began to consider symbolic titles misleading, and instead began using numbers and dates for each work he completed. Pollock’s art also became darker in color. He abandoned the “drip” method, and began painting in black and white, which proved unsuccessful. Depressed and haunted, Pollock would frequently meet his friends at the nearby Cedar Bar, drinking until it closed and getting into violent fights.

Concerned for Pollock’s well-being, Krasner called on Pollock’s mother to help. Her presence helped to stabilize Pollock, and he began to paint again. He completed his masterpiece, “The Deep,” during this period.

But as the demand from collectors for Pollock’s art grew, so too did the pressure he felt, and with it his alcoholism.

Overwhelmed with Pollock’s needs, Krasner was also unable to work. Their marriage became troubled, and Pollock’s health was failing. He started dating other women, and by 1956, he had quit painting, and his marriage was in shambles. Krasner reluctantly left for Paris to give Pollock space.

Just after 10 p.m. on August 11, 1956, Pollock, who had been drinking, crashed his car into a tree less than a mile from his home. Ruth Kligman, his girlfriend at the time, was thrown from the car and survived. Another passenger, Edith Metzger, was killed, and Pollock was thrown 50 feet into the air and into a birch tree. He died immediately.

Krasner returned from France to bury Pollock, and subsequently went into a mourning that would last the rest of her life. Retaining her creativity and productivity, Krasner lived and painted for another 20 years. She also managed the sale of Pollock’s paintings, carefully distributing them to museums. Before her death, Krasner set up the Pollock-Krasner Foundation, which gives grants to young, promising artists. When Krasner died on June 19, 1984, the estate was worth $20 million.

In December 1956, the year after his death, Pollock was given a memorial retrospective exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, and then another in 1967. His work has continued to be honored on a large scale, with frequent exhibitions at both the MoMA in New York and the Tate in London. He remains one of the most influential artists of the 20th century.

Source: Jackson Pollock – Wikipedia

Source: Jackson Pollock Biography, Art, and Analysis of Works | The Art Story

Source: Jackson Pollock – Painter – Biography.com

Source: Jackson Pollock

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Happy 101st Birthday Dinah Shore

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Today is the 101st birthday of the singer, actor, talk show host and former owner of significant mid-century modern Palm Springs architecture: Dinah Shore. I remember watching her talk show with my grandmother. The world is a better place because she was in it and still feels the loss that she has left.

NAME: Dinah Shore

OCCUPATION: Singer, Television Personality
BIRTH DATE: March 1, 1917
DEATH DATE: February 24, 1994
EDUCATION: Vanderbilt University
PLACE OF BIRTH: Winchester, Tennessee
PLACE OF DEATH: Beverly Hills, California
REMAINS: Cremated, Hillside Memorial Park, Culver City, CA
BROADCASTING AND CABLE HALL OF FAME
EMMY 1955 Best Female Singer
EMMY 1956 Best Female Singer
EMMY 1957 Best Female Personality
EMMY 1958 for The Dinah Shore Show
EMMY 1959 for The Dinah Shore Show
EMMY 1973 for Dinah’s Place
DAYTIME EMMY 1974 for Dinah’s Place
DAYTIME EMMY 1976 for Dinah!
GOLDEN GLOBE 1956 for Disneyland (single episode)
WORLD GOLF HALL OF FAME 1994
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME 6914 Hollywood Blvd.

BEST KNOWN FOR: Dinah Shore was an award-winning television personality and singer known for her string of TV shows, including Dinah!, Dinah’s Place, and Dinah and Friends.

On March 1, 1917, Dinah Shore was born as Frances Rose Shore in Winchester, Tennessee. While a student at Vanderbilt University, Shore started performing her own short program on a Nashville radio station. After completing her degree in sociology, she moved to New York City in 1938, intending to pursue a career as a singer.

Shore soon landed a job singing on a New York radio station called WNEW. Recording success took a little longer, but in the early 1940s she began to release hits such as “Jim” and “Blues in the Night.” During World War II, Shore often performed for the troops, singing songs like “You’d Be So Nice to Come Home To” and “I’ll Walk Alone,” which reached No. 1.

Shore also began to appear in films in the 1940s. She worked with Gypsy Rose Lee in Belle of the Yukon (1944) and was seen in Till the Clouds Roll By (1946), a biographical musical about Jerome Kern. However, Shore did not take to film work and only appeared in seven movies.

In the late 1940s, Shore continued to enjoy success on the charts. Her hits from this period include such songs as “I Love You for Sentimental Reasons” and “Buttons and Bows.”

In 1951, Shore’s self-titled variety show made its debut; it was the start of what would turn out to be a long-running career on television. The Dinah Shore Chevy Show began in 1956. The program, which featured Shore singing “See the USA in your Chevrolet,” achieved even greater success and stayed on the air until 1963.

Shore’s television career evolved over the years, but her warm personality consistently charmed audiences. In the 1970s, she became a popular talk show host with a series of shows: Dinah’s Place (1970-74), Dinah! (1974-80) and Dinah and Friends (1979-1984).

Shore’s last talk show, A Conversation with Dinah, aired on the Nashville Network from 1989 to 1991. One of television’s most popular personalities, she won 10 Emmy Awards, a Peabody Award and a Golden Globe during her career.

Shore was passionate about golf and sponsored a women’s golf tournament in California—the Dinah Shore Classic—for many years. Her contributions to the sport earned her honorary membership in the Ladies Professional Golf Association Tour Hall of Fame.

Shore’s first husband was actor George Montgomery. The two were married from 1943 to 1962. She later had a brief marriage to tennis player Maurice Fabian Smith. In the 1970s, Shore became known for her relationship with a much younger man—actor Burt Reynolds.

Shore died of cancer on February 24, 1994, at her home in Beverly Hills, California. She was 76 years old. Shore was survived by her two children from her first marriage, Melissa and John.

TELEVISION
The Dinah Shore Show Host (1951-56)
The Dinah Shore Chevy Show Host (1956-63)
Dinah’s Place Host (1970-74)

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Christmas at Pee Wee’s Playhouse (1988) · Herself
HealtH (12-Sep-1980) · Herself
Death Car on the Freeway (25-Sep-1979)
Oh, God! (7-Oct-1977) · Herself
Aaron Slick from Punkin Crick (1-Apr-1952)
Fun and Fancy Free (27-Sep-1947) [VOICE]
Till the Clouds Roll By (5-Dec-1946) · Julie Sanderson
Make Mine Music (20-Apr-1946) · Herself [VOICE]
Belle of the Yukon (26-Dec-1944) · Lettie Candless
Follow the Boys (25-Apr-1944) · Herself
Up in Arms (17-Feb-1944) · Virginia
Thank Your Lucky Stars (1-Oct-1943) · Herself

Author of books:
Someone’s in the Kitchen With Dinah (1971, cookbook)
The Dinah Shore Cook Book (1983, cookbook)
The Dinah Shore American Kitchen: Homestyle Cooking With Flair (1990, cookbook)

Source: Dinah Shore

Source: Dinah Shore – Wikipedia

Source: Dinah Shore – Singer, Television Personality – Biography.com

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Happy 93rd Birthday Kim Stanley

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Today is the 93rd birthday of the actress Kim Stanley.  She was the narrator of To Kill A Mockingbird and played Francis Farmer‘s mother in Frances, two gorgeous films that are so very powerful and important.  Her body of work is so incredibly impressive and valuable.  The world is a better place because she was in it and still feels the loss because she has left.

NAME: Patricia Reid
DATE OF BIRTH: February 11, 1925
BIRTHPLACE: Tularosa, New Mexico, U.S.
DATE OF DEATH: August 20, 2001 (aged 76)
PLACE OF DEATH: Santa Fe, New Mexico, U.S.

BEST KNOWN FOR: American actress, primarily in television and theatre, but with occasional film performances.

Kim Stanley (born Patricia Reid) was an American actress, primarily in television and theatre, but with occasional film performances.

She began her acting career in theatre, and subsequently attended the Actors Studio in New York City, New York. She received the 1952 Theatre World Award for her role in The Chase (1952), and starred in the Broadway productions of Picnic (1953) and Bus Stop (1955). Stanley was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Play for her roles in A Touch of the Poet (1959) and A Far Country (1962).

During the 1950s, Stanley was a prolific performer in television, and later progressed to film, with a well-received performance in The Goddess (1959). She was the narrator of To Kill a Mockingbird (1962) and starred in Séance on a Wet Afternoon (1964), for which she won the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress. She was less active during the remainder of her career; two of her later film successes were as the mother of Frances Farmer in Frances (1982), for which she received a second Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actress, and as Pancho Barnes in The Right Stuff (1983). She received an Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress – Miniseries or a Movie for her performance as Big Mama in a television adaptation of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1985).

She did not act during her later years, preferring the role of teacher, in Los Angeles, California, and later Santa Fe, New Mexico, where she died in 2001, of uterine cancer.


Happy 94th Birthday Marlon Brando

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Today is the 94th birthday of Marlon Brando. He was brilliant and beautiful. Have you seen A Streetcar Named Desire or On The Waterfront lately? He did get kind of strange, but we all will if we are lucky to live long enough. The world is a better place because he was in it and still feels the loss that he has left.

NAME: Marlon Brando
OCCUPATION: Film Actor
BIRTH DATE: April 3, 1924
DEATH DATE: July 1, 2004
PLACE OF BIRTH: Omaha, Nebraska
PLACE OF DEATH: Los Angeles, California
REMAINS: Cremated (ashes scattered in Tahiti and Death Valley)
OSCAR for Best Actor 1955 for On the Waterfront
GOLDEN GLOBE 1955 for On the Waterfront
GOLDEN GLOBE 1956 for World Film Favorite, Male
OSCAR for Best Actor 1973 for The Godfather
GOLDEN GLOBE 1973 for The Godfather
GOLDEN GLOBE 1974 for World Film Favorite, Male
EMMY 1979 for Roots: The Next Generations
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME 1777 Vine Street

BEST KNOWN FOR: Legendary screen presence Marlon Brando performed for more than 50 years and is famous for such films as A Streetcar Named Desire and The Godfather.

Actor Marlon Brando was born on April 3, 1924, in Omaha, Nebraska. Brando grew up in Illinois, and after expulsion from a military academy, he dug ditches until his father offered to finance his education. Brando moved to New York to study with acting coach Stella Adler and at Lee Strasberg’s Actors’ Studio. Adler has often been credited as the principal inspiration in Brando’s early career, and with opening the actor to great works of literature, music and theater.

While at the Actors’ Studio, Brando adopted the “method approach,” which emphasizes characters’ motivations for actions. He made his Broadway debut in John Van Druten’s sentimental I Remember Mama (1944). New York theater critics voted him Broadway’s Most Promising Actor for his performance in Truckline Caf (1946). In 1947, he played his greatest stage role, Stanley Kowalski — the brute who rapes his sister-in-law, the fragile Blanche du Bois in Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire.

Hollywood beckoned to Brando, and he made his motion picture debut as a paraplegic World War II veteran in The Men (1950). Although he did not cooperate with the Hollywood publicity machine, he went on to play Kowalski in the 1951 film version of A Streetcar Named Desire, a popular and critical success that earned four Academy Awards.

Brando’s next movie, Viva Zapata! (1952), with a script by John Steinbeck, traces Emiliano Zapata’s rise from peasant to revolutionary. Brando followed that with Julius Caesar and then The Wild One (1954), in which he played a motorcycle-gang leader in all his leather-jacketed glory. Next came his Academy Award-winning role as a longshoreman fighting the system in On the Waterfront, a hard-hitting look at New York City labor unions.

During the rest of the decade, Brando’s screen roles ranged from Napoleon Bonaparte in Désirée (1954), to Sky Masterson in 1955’s Guys and Dolls, in which he sang and danced, to a Nazi soldier in The Young Lions (1958). From 1955 to 1958, movie exhibitors voted him one of the top 10 box-office draws in the nation.

During the 1960s, however, his career had more downs than ups, especially after the MGM studio’s disastrous 1962 remake of Mutiny on the Bounty, which failed to recoup even half of its enormous budget. Brando portrayed Fletcher Christian, Clark Gable’s role in the 1935 original. Brando’s excessive self-indulgence reached a pinnacle during the filming of this movie. He was criticized for his on-set tantrums and for trying to alter the script. Off the set, he had numerous affairs, ate too much, and distanced himself from the cast and crew. His contract for making the movie included $5,000 for every day the film went over its original schedule. He made $1.25 million when all was said and done.

Brando’s career was reborn in 1972 with his depiction of Mafia chieftain Don Corleone in Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather, a role for which he received the Academy Award for Best Actor. He turned down the Oscar, however, in protest of Hollywood’s treatment of Native Americans. Brando himself did not appear at the awards show. Instead, he sent a Native American Apache named Sacheen Littlefeather (who was later determined to be an actress portraying a Native American) to decline the award on his behalf.

Brando proceeded the following year to the highly controversial yet highly acclaimed Last Tango in Paris, which was rated X. Since then, Brando has received huge salaries for playing small parts in such movies as Superman (1978) and Apocalypse Now (1979). Nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for A Dry White Season in 1989, Brando also appeared in the comedy The Freshman with Matthew Broderick.

In 1995, Brando costarred in Don Juan DeMarco with Johnny Depp. In early 1996, Brando costarred in the poorly received The Island of Dr. Moreau. Entertainment Weekly reported that the actor was using an earpiece to remember his lines. His costar in the film, David Thewlis, told the magazine that Brando nonetheless impressed him. “When he walks into a room,” Thewlis noted, “you know he’s around.”

In 2001, Brando starred as an aging jewel thief in pursuit of one last payoff in The Score, also starring Robert De Niro, Edward Norton, and Angela Bassett.

It has been observed that Brando has perhaps loved food and womanizing too much. His best acting performances are roles that required him to show a constrained and displayed rage and suffering. His own rage may have come from parents who did not care about him.

Time magazine reported, “Brando had a stern, cold father and a dream-disheveled mother- both alcoholics, both sexually promiscuous-and he encompassed both their natures without resolving the conflict.” Brando himself wrote in his autobiography, “If my father were alive today, I don’t know what I would do. After he died, I used to think, ‘God, just give him to me alive for eight seconds because I want to break his jaw.'”

Although Brando avoids speaking in detail about his marriages, even in his autobiography, it is known that he has been married three times to three ex-actresses. He has at least 11 children. Five of the children are with his three wives, three are with his Guatemalan housekeeper, and the other three children are from affairs. One of Brando’s sons, Christian Brando, told People magazine, “The family kept changing shape. I’d sit down at the breakfast table and say, ‘Who are you?'”

In 1991, Christian was convicted of voluntary manslaughter in the death of his sister’s fiancee, Dag Drollet, and received a 10-year sentence. He claimed Drollet was physically abusing his pregnant sister, Cheyenne. Christian said he struggled with Drollet and accidentally shot him in the face. Brando, in the house at the time, gave mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to Drollet and called 911. At Christian’s trial, People reported one of Brando’s comments on the witness stand, “I tried to be a good father. I did the best I could.”

Brando’s daughter, Cheyenne, was a troubled young woman. In and out of drug rehabilitation centers and mental hospitals for much of her life, she lived in Tahiti with her mother Tarita (one of Brando’s wives, whom he met on the set of Mutiny on the Bounty). People reported in 1990 that Cheyenne said of Brando, “I have come to despise my father for the way he ignored me as a child.”

After Drollet’s death, Cheyenne became even more reclusive and depressed. A judge ruled that she was too depressed to raise her child and gave custody of the boy to her mother, Tarita. Cheyenne took a leave from a mental hospital on Easter Sunday in 1995 to visit her family. At her mother’s home that day, Cheyenne, who had attempted suicide before, hanged herself.

Brando’s years of self-indulgence are visible, as he weighed well over 300 pounds in the mid-1990s. The actor died of pulmonary fibrosis in a Los Angeles hospital in 2004 at the age of 80. But to judge Brando by his appearance and dismiss his work because of his later, less significant acting jobs, however, would be a mistake. His performance in A Streetcar Named Desire brought audiences to their knees, and his range of roles is a testament to his capability to explore many aspects of the human psyche.

FILMOGRAPHY AS DIRECTOR
One-Eyed Jacks (30-Mar-1961)

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Birth of the Living Dead (18-Oct-2013) · Himself
The Score (9-Jul-2001)
Free Money (3-Dec-1998) · The Swede
The Brave (10-May-1997)
The Island of Dr. Moreau (23-Aug-1996) · Dr. Moreau
Don Juan DeMarco (7-Apr-1995) · Jack Mickler
Christopher Columbus: The Discovery (20-Aug-1992)
Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse (May-1991) · Himself
The Freshman (20-Jul-1990)
A Dry White Season (10-Sep-1989)
The Formula (19-Dec-1980)
Apocalypse Now (15-Aug-1979) · Col. Kurtz
Superman (15-Dec-1978) · Jor-El
The Missouri Breaks (19-May-1976) · Lee Clayton
Last Tango in Paris (14-Oct-1972) · Paul
The Godfather (15-Mar-1972) · Don Vito Corleone
The Nightcomers (15-Feb-1972) · Peter Quint
Burn! (21-Dec-1969)
The Night of the Following Day (26-Dec-1968) · Chauffeur
Candy (17-Dec-1968)
Reflections in a Golden Eye (11-Oct-1967) · Maj. Weldon Penderton
A Countess from Hong Kong (5-Jan-1967)
The Appaloosa (14-Sep-1966) · Matt
The Chase (19-Feb-1966)
Morituri (25-Aug-1965)
Bedtime Story (10-Jun-1964)
The Ugly American (2-Apr-1963)
Mutiny on the Bounty (8-Nov-1962) · Fletcher Christian
One-Eyed Jacks (30-Mar-1961) · Rio
The Fugitive Kind (1-Dec-1959) · Val Xavier
The Young Lions (2-Apr-1958)
Sayonara (5-Dec-1957) · Maj. Gruver
The Teahouse of the August Moon (29-Nov-1956) · Sakini
Guys and Dolls (3-Nov-1955) · Sky Masterson
Desirée (17-Nov-1954)
On the Waterfront (28-Jul-1954) · Terry Malloy
The Wild One (30-Dec-1953) · Johnny
Julius Caesar (4-Jun-1953) · Mark Antony
Viva Zapata! (7-Feb-1952) · Zapata
A Streetcar Named Desire (18-Sep-1951) · Stanley
The Men (20-Jul-1950) · Ken

Source: Marlon Brando

Source: Marlon Brando – Wikipedia

Source: Marlon Brando – Film Actor, Actor – Biography.com

Source: Marlon Brando

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Happy 125th Birthday Harold Lloyd

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Today is the 125th birthday of the silent film actor Harold Lloyd. The world is a better place because he was in it and still feels the loss that he has left.

NAME: Harold Lloyd
OCCUPATION: Film Actor, Comedian
BIRTH DATE: April 20, 1893
DEATH DATE: March 8, 1971
PLACE OF BIRTH: Burchard, Nebraska
PLACE OF DEATH: Beverly Hills, California
OSCAR: (honorary) 1953
GRAND MARSHAL OF THE TOURNAMENT OF ROSES: 1935
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME: 1501 Vine St.
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME: 6840 Hollywood Blvd.

BEST KNOWN FOR: Comedian Harold Lloyd was a star of silent film era, appearing in notable movies Just Nuts, Girl Shy and The Freshman.

Harold Lloyd, motion-picture comedian who was the highest paid star of the 1920s and one of the cinema’s most popular personalities.

The son of an itinerant commercial photographer, Lloyd finally settled in San Diego, Calif., where in 1913 he started playing minor parts in one-reel comedies. He mastered the art of the comic chase in the short time he was a member of Mack Sennett’s Keystone comedy troupe. In 1915 Lloyd joined the new acting company formed by Hal Roach, a former actor who had turned producer. During this period he experimented with a comic character, the bewhiskered Willie Work. The most consistently successful of his early films, however, were those of the Lonesome Luke series. Beginning with Just Nuts (1915), Luke quickly became a popular U.S. screen character.

By 1918 the figure of the ordinary white-faced man in round glasses had replaced Luke as Lloyd’s screen trademark. He developed his humour from plot and situation and was the first comedian to use physical danger as a source of laughter. Lloyd performed his own stunts and was known as the screen’s most daring comedian. In Safety Last! (1923), an outstanding success, he hung from the hands of a clock several stories above a city street; in Girl Shy (1924) he took a thrilling ride atop a runaway streetcar; in The Freshman (1925), one of the most successful of all silent pictures, he stood in for the football tackling dummy.

Lloyd’s peak of popularity was reached during the period of silent films, when emphasis was on visual rather than verbal humour, although he made many films after the coming of sound. His last was Mad Wednesday (1947). He was honored with a special Academy Award in 1952 for his contribution to motion-picture comedy. In 1962 Lloyd released Harold Lloyd’s World of Comedy, a compilation of scenes from his old movies, and Harold Lloyd’s Funny Side of Life. The reception given to both demonstrated the timelessness of Lloyd’s silent comedy.

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Mad Wednesday (18-Feb-1947) · Harold Diddlebock
Professor Beware (13-Jul-1938)
The Milky Way (7-Feb-1936) · Burleigh Sullivan
The Cat’s-Paw (30-Jul-1934)
Movie Crazy (12-Aug-1932) · Harold Hall
Feet First (8-Nov-1930)
Welcome Danger (12-Oct-1929) · Harold Bledsoe
Speedy (7-Apr-1928)
The Kid Brother (22-Jan-1927) · Harold Hickory
For Heaven’s Sake (4-Apr-1926) · J. Harold Manners
The Freshman (20-Sep-1925) · The Freshman
Hot Water (26-Oct-1924) · Hubby
Girl Shy (20-Apr-1924) · Harold Meadows
Why Worry? (2-Sep-1923)
Safety Last! (1-Apr-1923) · The Boy
Dr. Jack (26-Nov-1922)
Grandma’s Boy (20-May-1922)
A Sailor-Made Man (25-Dec-1921) · The Boy
Never Weaken (22-Oct-1921) · The Boy
Among Those Present (29-May-1921) · The Boy
Now or Never (27-Mar-1921)
Number, Please? (26-Dec-1920) · The Boy
Get Out and Get Under (12-Sep-1920) · The Boy
Haunted Spooks (14-Mar-1920) · The Boy
His Royal Slyness (8-Feb-1920)
Ask Father (9-Feb-1919) · The Boy

Source: Harold Lloyd

Source: Harold Lloyd – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Source: Harold Lloyd | American actor | Britannica.com

 

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Happy 92nd Birthday Cloris Leachman

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Today is the 92nd birthday of the actress Cloris Leachman. She has had a life and is still grinding. You have to love and appreciate longevity. The world is a better place because she is in it.

NAME: Cloris Leachman
OCCUPATION: Actor
BIRTH DATE: April 30, 1926
EDUCATION: Roosevelt High School, Northwestern University, The Actors Studio, Illinois State University
PLACE OF BIRTH: Des Moines, Iowa
OSCAR for Best Supporting Actress 1972 for The Last Picture Show
GOLDEN GLOBE 1976 for Phyllis (television)
EMMY 1973 for A Brand New Life (single performance)
EMMY 1974 for Mary Tyler Moore (episode “The Lars Affair”)
EMMY 1975 for Cher (single performance)
EMMY 1984 for Screen Actors Guild 50th Anniversary Celebration
EMMY 1998 for Promised Land (guest)
EMMY 2002 for Malcolm in the Middle (guest)
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME 6435 Hollywood Blvd. (television)

BEST KNOWN FOR: American actress Cloris Leachman has had a long, successful career in television and film, playing a range of dramatic and comedic roles.

Cloris Leachman was born on April 30, 1926, in Des Moines, Iowa. She is the oldest of three daughters of Cloris (Wallace) and Berkeley Claiborne Leachman. Her father worked in the family lumber business, and her mother encouraged Cloris’s early interest in entertaining.

In 1946, while attending Northwestern University, Leachman competed in the Miss America pageant as Miss Chicago. She didn’t win the Miss America title, but she used her pageant winnings to move to New York City and begin an acting career. She attended the Actors Studio in its earliest years, studying with famous director Elia Kazan. She was successful in landing theater roles on Broadway: she performed in Shakespeare’s As You Like It (with Katherine Hepburn) and the original run of the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical South Pacific, among other productions.

Leachman also proved herself as a versatile television actor, working consistently in bit parts on many popular series. In the 1950s and 1960s, she added shows such as Alfred Hitchcock Presents, The Untouchables, Gunsmoke and Lassie to her resumé. She also took roles in motion pictures, including the film noir drama Kiss Me Deadly in 1955.

Leachman gained greater recognition in her film career in the late 1960s and 1970s as she continued to play a variety of roles. She took the small but memorable part of a prostitute in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), appearing alongside Paul Newman. Two years later, her performance as a frustrated, adulterous housewife in Peter Bogdanovich’s The Last Picture Show earned her an Academy Award (best supporting actress) in 1971.

This success was followed by a supporting role in another film directed by Bogdanovich, the literary adaptation Daisy Miller (1974). Leachman went on to act in three comedies directed by Mel Brooks, showcasing her signature combination of willowy, blonde good looks and zany comedic delivery in Young Frankenstein in 1974; High Anxiety in 1977; and History of the World, Part I in 1982.

Meanwhile, Leachman’s television career also continued to accelerate. From 1970 to 1975, Leachman appeared on The Mary Tyler Moore Show as Mary’s hilariously self-centered landlady Phyllis Lindstrom. After the close of the series, Leachman starred in the spin-off sitcom Phyllis from 1975 to 1977. She reinvented herself each decade with parts on popular sitcoms, including The Facts of Life, from 1986 to 1988, and Malcolm in the Middle, on which she played a grandmother from 2001 to 2006. Leachman has won eight Emmy awards for television performances throughout her career.

Leachman continues to act in film and television. She performed on Dancing with the Stars in 2008, and landed a part on the comedy-drama series Raising Hope in 2010. Leachman published a memoir Cloris: My Autobiography, in 2009.

Leachman has been married once, to film producer and director George Englund, from 1953 to 1979. The couple had five children together: Bryan (deceased), Morgan, Adam, Dinah and George Jr.

TELEVISION
Raising Hope Maw Maw (2010-)
Dancing with the Stars Contestant (2008)
Malcolm in the Middle Ida (Lois’s mother, 2001-06)
The Ellen Show Dot Richmond (2001-02)
Touched by an Angel Ruth (1997-2003)
Walter & Emily Emily Collins (1991-92)
The Nutt House Ms. Frick (1989)
The Facts of Life Beverly Ann Stickle (1986-88)
Phyllis Phyllis Lindstrom (1975-77)
The Mary Tyler Moore Show Phyllis Lindstrom (1970-75)
Dr. Kildare Rhoda Kirsh (1965)

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
The Wedding Ringer (14-Jan-2015)
Adult World (18-Apr-2013)
The Croods (15-Feb-2013) [VOICE]
Gambit (7-Nov-2012)
The Oogieloves in the Big Balloon Adventure (29-Aug-2012)
The Fields (24-Sep-2011)
American Cowslip (24-Jul-2009) · Sandy
Love Takes Wing (4-Apr-2009)
New York, I Love You (5-Feb-2009) · Mitzie
The Women (12-Sep-2008)
Lake Placid 2 (28-Apr-2007)
Beerfest (25-Aug-2006)
Scary Movie 4 (12-Apr-2006)
Mrs. Harris (16-Sep-2005)
Sky High (29-Jul-2005)
The Longest Yard (27-May-2005) · Lynette
Spanglish (17-Dec-2004) · Evelyn
Alex and Emma (16-Jun-2003) · Grandmother
Manna From Heaven (17-Jan-2003)
The Amati Girls (Oct-2000)
Hanging Up (16-Feb-2000) · Pat
Music of the Heart (6-Sep-1999)
The Iron Giant (31-Jul-1999) · Mrs. Tensedge [VOICE]
Annabelle’s Wish (21-Oct-1997) [VOICE]
Beavis and Butthead Do America (20-Dec-1996) · Old Woman on Plane and Bus [VOICE]
Now and Then (20-Oct-1995)
A Troll in Central Park (7-Oct-1994) · Queen Gnorga [VOICE]
Double, Double, Toil and Trouble (30-Oct-1993) · Aunts Agatha and Sofia
The Beverly Hillbillies (15-Oct-1993) · Granny
My Boyfriend’s Back (6-Aug-1993)
Picture This: The Times of Peter Bogdanovich in Archer City, Texas (7-Sep-1991) · Herself
The Giant of Thunder Mountain (1-Mar-1991)
In Broad Daylight (3-Feb-1991)
Love Hurts (9-Nov-1990)
Fine Things (16-Oct-1990)
Texasville (28-Sep-1990)
Prancer (17-Nov-1989)
Hansel and Gretel (May-1987) · The Witch
Walk Like a Man (17-Apr-1987) · Margaret Shand
My Little Pony: The Movie (20-Jun-1986) [VOICE]
Shadow Play (1986)
Deadly Intentions (19-May-1985)
Ernie Kovacs: Between the Laughter (14-May-1984)
The Demon Murder Case (6-Mar-1983)
History of the World: Part I (12-Jun-1981)
This Time Forever (1981)
Foolin’ Around (17-Oct-1980)
Herbie Goes Bananas (25-Jun-1980)
The Oldest Living Graduate (7-Apr-1980) · Maureen
Scavenger Hunt (21-Dec-1979)
S.O.S. Titanic (23-Sep-1979)
The Muppet Movie (22-Jun-1979)
The North Avenue Irregulars (9-Feb-1979)
Backstairs at the White House (29-Jan-1979)
High Anxiety (25-Dec-1977) · Nurse Diesel
It Happened One Christmas (11-Dec-1977)
The Mouse and His Child (18-Nov-1977) [VOICE]
Death Scream (26-Sep-1975)
A Girl Named Sooner (18-Jun-1975)
Crazy Mama (Jun-1975) · Melba
Young Frankenstein (15-Dec-1974) · Frau Blücher
Death Sentence (2-Oct-1974)
Daisy Miller (22-May-1974)
Thursday’s Game (14-Apr-1974)
The Migrants (3-Feb-1974)
Happy Mother’s Day, Love George (17-Aug-1973)
Charley and the Angel (23-Mar-1973)
A Brand New Life (20-Feb-1973)
Dillinger (2-Feb-1973) · Anna Sage
The Last Picture Show (3-Oct-1971) · Ruth Popper
The Steagle (15-Sep-1971)
The People Next Door (26-Aug-1970)
WUSA (19-Aug-1970)
Lovers and Other Strangers (12-Aug-1970)
Silent Night, Lonely Night (16-Dec-1969)
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (23-Sep-1969) · Agnes
The Chapman Report (5-Oct-1962) · Miss Selby
The Rack (2-Nov-1956)
Kiss Me Deadly (18-May-1955) · Christina

Source: Cloris Leachman – Actor – Biography.com

Source: Cloris Leachman

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Happy 96th Birthday Nancy Walker

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Today is the 96th birthday of Nancy Walker.  My natural draw to 70’s mystery detective TV dramas made it natural that I loved her on McMillan & Wife.  Her entire resume reads impressively, the best TV shows of the time, she was on them, iconic TV shows of every decade, she guest starred.  The world is a better place because she was in it and still feel the loss that she las left.nancy walker 1

NAME: Nancy Walker
OCCUPATION: Theater Actress, Television Actress, Film Actor/Film Actress
BIRTH DATE: May 10, 1922
DEATH DATE: March 25, 1992
PLACE OF BIRTH: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
PLACE OF DEATH: Studio City, California
ORIGINALLY: Anna Myrtle Swoyer

BEST KNOWN FOR: Actress Nancy Walker appeared in films and on stage before playing Ida Morgenstern on The Mary Tyler Moore Show and Rosie in the Bounty paper towel commercials.

Actress Nancy Walker was born Anna Myrtle Swoyer on May 10, 1922, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Perhaps best known as the overbearing mother Ida Morgenstern on the 1970s comedy series Rhoda, Nancy Walker was an established stage performer for decades before making it in television. The daughter of vaudeville comedian, she landed her first Broadway role at the age of 19, appearing in 1941’s Best Foot Forward. Walker went on to star in the original production of On the Town (1944).

Nancy Walker also landed film roles, including 1943’s Girl Crazy with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney, and 1954’s Lucky Me with Doris Day. Largely devoted to stage work, she made several television guest appearances in the 1950s and 1960s. In the 1970s, she had her two most notable television roles. From 1971 to 1976, she played the sharp, outspoken housekeeper Mildred on McMillan & Wife, starring Rock Hudson and Susan Saint James. Walker’s character, Mrs. Ida Morgenstern, appeared on both The Mary Tyler Moore Show and its spin-off Rhoda.

As Ida Morgenstern, she had audiences laughing at her depiction of the tough, loving and smothering mother as well as identifying with the conflicts between her character and her daughter Rhoda played by Valerie Harper. On Rhoda, Ida harassed two of her children—her youngest daughter Brenda was played by Julie Kavner. She was nominated for an Emmy Award three times for her work on McMillan & Wife and four times for her performance on Rhoda.

A great supporting actress, Nancy Walker’s attempt to have her own series failed. The Nancy Walker Show aired for one season from 1976 to 1977. After its cancellation, she returned to Rhoda for its final season. Throughout the rest of the 1970s and 1980s, Walker mostly appeared on television as a guest star, stopping in on such hit shows, as The Love Boat, Fame, Happy Days and The Golden Girls, which earned her an Emmy Award nomination. In 1990, she returned to series television with True Colors, a comedy about interracial marriage. The show lasted for two years and included Walker’s final performances.

Nancy Walker died on March 25, 1992, in Studio City, California. She was married to David Craig since 1951 and the couple had one child together.


TELEVISION
True Colors Sara (1990-92)
Blansky’s Beauties Nancy Blansky (1977)
The Nancy Walker Show Nancy Kitteridge (1976-77)
Rhoda Ida Morgenstern (1974-78)
McMillan and Wife Mildred (1971-76)
The Mary Tyler Moore Show Ida Morgenstern (1970-74)
Family Affair Emily Turner (1970-71)

FILMOGRAPHY AS DIRECTOR
Can’t Stop the Music (20-Jun-1980)

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Murder by Death (23-Jun-1976) · Maid
Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved Hollywood (26-May-1976)
Death Scream (26-Sep-1975)
Thursday’s Game (14-Apr-1974)
40 Carats (28-Jun-1973)
The World’s Greatest Athlete (14-Feb-1973)
Every Man Needs One (13-Dec-1972)
Stand Up and Be Counted (May-1972)
Lucky Me (9-Apr-1954) · Flo
Broadway Rhythm (19-Jan-1944) · Trixie Simpson
Girl Crazy (26-Nov-1943) · Polly Williams
Best Foot Forward (29-Jun-1943) · Blind Date

Source: Nancy Walker – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Source: Nancy Walker – Theater Actress, Film Actress, Television Actress – Biography.com

Source: Nancy Walker, 69, of ‘Rhoda’ And TV Commercials, Is Dead – NYTimes.com

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Happy 115th Birthday Bob Hope

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Today is the 115th birthday of an entertainer whose list of honors is almost as long as his list of films:  Bob Hope. In his one hundred years of life, he received four Oscars, an Emmy, a Golden Globe, a Congressional Medal of Freedom, two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, a Kennedy Center Honor, and was inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame and the World Golf Hall of Fame.  He made troops overseas and their loved ones at home laugh at his corny jokes and he built one of the most architecturally significant and  impressive houses in the desert.  The world is a better place because he was in it and still feels the loss that he has left.

NAME: Bob Hope
OCCUPATION: Film Actor, Television Actor, Television Personality
BIRTH DATE: May 29, 1903
DEATH DATE: July 27, 2003
PLACE OF BIRTH: Eltham, United Kingdom
PLACE OF DEATH: Toluca Lake, California
ORIGINALLY: Leslie Townes Hope
OSCAR: (honorary) 1941
OSCAR: (honorary) 1945
OSCAR: (honorary) 1953
OSCAR: (honorary) 1966
EMMY: 1966 for Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre
GOLDEN GLOBE: 1958 Ambassador of Good Will
CONGRESSIONAL GOLD MEDAL: 1962
PRESIDENTIAL MEDAL OF FREEDOM 1969
GRAND MARSHAL OF THE TOURNAMENT OF ROSES: 1947
GRAND MARSHAL OF THE TOURNAMENT OF ROSES: 1969
HONORARY HARLEM GLOBETROTTER: 1977
KENNEDY CENTER HONORS: 1985
RADIO HALL OF FAME: 1990
WORLD GOLF HALL OF FAME: 1983
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME: 6541 Hollywood Blvd. (motion pictures)
HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME: 6758 Hollywood Blvd. (television)
NATIONAL MEDAL OF ARTS: 1995

BEST KNOWN FOR:  Bob Hope was a entertainer and comic actor, known for his rapid-fire delivery of jokes and for his success in virtually all entertainment media.

Born in 1903, Bob Hope was a British-born American entertainer and comic actor known for his rapid-fire delivery of jokes and one-liners, as well as his success in virtually all entertainment media and his decades of overseas tours to entertain American troops. Hope received numerous awards and honors for his work as an entertainer and humanitarian. He died on July 27, 2003.

Born as Leslie Townes Hope in 1903, Bob Hope reigned as the king of American comedy for decades. He started out his life, however, across the Atlantic. Hope spent his first years of life in England, where his father worked as a stonemason. In 1907, Hope came to the United States and his family settled in Cleveland, Ohio. His large family, which included his six brothers, struggled financially in Hope’s younger years, so Hope worked a number of jobs, ranging from a soda jerk to a shoe salesman, as a young man to help ease his parents’ financial strain.

Hope’s mother, an aspiring singer at one time, shared her expertise with Bob. He also took dancing lessons and developed an act with his girlfriend, Mildred Rosequist ,as a teenager. The pair played local vaudeville theaters for a time. Bitten by the showbiz bug, Hope next partnered up with friend Lloyd Durbin for a two-man dance routine. After Durbin died on the road of food poisoning, Hope joined forces with George Byrne. Hope and Byrne landed some work with film star Fatty Arbuckle and made it to Broadway in Sidewalks of New York in 1927.

By the early 1930s, Hope had gone solo. He attracted widespread notice for his role in the Broadway musical Roberta, which showcased his quick wit and superb comic timing. Around this time, Hope met singer Dolores Reade. The pair married in 1934. He again showed off his comedic talents in the Ziegfeld Follies of 1936. Later that year, Hope landed a leading part in Red, Hot and Blue, with Ethel Merman and Jimmy Durante.

In 1937, Hope landed his first radio contract. He got his own show the following year, which became a regular feature on Tuesday nights. Week after week, listeners tuned in to hear Hope’s snappy one-liners and wisecracks. He became one of radio’s most popular performers, and stayed on the air until the mid-1950s.

In the late 1930s, Hope made the jump to feature films. His first major role came in The Big Broadcast of 1938, in which he sang “Thanks for the Memory” with Shirley Ross. The song became his trademark tune. The following year, Hope starred in The Cat and the Canary, a hit comedic mystery. He played a sharp, smart-talking coward in this haunted house tale—a type of character he would play numerous times over his career.

In 1940, Hope made his first film with popular crooner Bing Crosby. The pair starred together as a pair of likeable con artists in The Road to Singapore with Dorothy Lamour playing their love interest. The duo proved to be box office gold. Hope and Crosby, who remained lifelong friends, made seven Road pictures together.

On his own and with Crosby, Hope starred in numerous hit comedies. He was one of the top film stars throughout the 1940s, with such hits as 1947’s western spoof The Paleface. Hope was often called upon to use his superior ad-lib skills as the host of Academy Awards. While he never won an Academy Award for his acting, Hope received several honors from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences over the years.

While his film career began to ebb in the 1950s, Hope enjoyed a new wave of success on the small screen. He starred in his first television special on NBC in 1950. His periodic specials became a long-standing feature on the network, managing to earn impressive ratings with each new show over a 40-year time span. Nominated several times over the years, Hope won an Emmy Award in 1966 for one of his Christmas specials.

During World War II, Hope began to regularly take time out of his film and television career to entertain American soldiers. He started out with a radio show he did at a California air base in 1941. Two years later, Hope traveled with USO performers to bring the laughs to military personnel overseas, including stops in Europe. He also went to the Pacific front the following year. In 1944, Hope wrote about his war experiences in I Never Left Home.

While he and his wife Dolores had four children of their own, they spent many of their Christmases with the troops. Vietnam was one of his most frequent holiday stops, visiting the country nine times during the Vietnam War. Hope took a break from his USO efforts until the early 1980s. He resumed his comedic mission with a trip to Lebanon in 1983. In the early 1990s, Hope went to Saudi Arabia to cheer on the soldiers who were engaged in the First Gulf War.

Hope traveled the world on behalf of the country’s servicemen and women, and received numerous accolades for his humanitarian efforts. His name was even placed on ships and planes. Perhaps the greatest honor, however, came in 1997: U.S. Congress passed a measure to make Hope an honorary veteran of the U.S. military service for his goodwill work on behalf of American soldiers.

By the late 1990s, Hope had become one of the most honored performers in entertainment history. He received more than 50 honorary degrees in his lifetime, as well as a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Kennedy Center in 1985, a Medal of the Arts from President Bill Clinton in 1995 and a British knighthood in 1998. The British-born Hope was especially surprised by the honorary knighthood, saying, “I’m speechless. Seventy years of ad-lib material and I’m speechless.”

Around this time, Hope donated his papers to the Library of Congress. He handed over his joke files, which he had kept in special file cabinets in a special room of his Lake Taluca, California home. These jokes—accumulating more than 85,000 pages of laughs—represented the work of Hope and the numerous writers that he kept on staff. At one point, Hope had 13 writers working for him.

In 2000, Hope attended the opening of the Bob Hope Gallery of American Entertainment at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. In the following years, he became increasingly frail. Hope quietly celebrated his 100th birthday in May of 2003, at his Taluca Lake home. There, he died of pneumonia on July 27, 2003.

President George W. Bush hailed Hope as “a great citizen” who “served our nation when he went to battlefields to entertain thousands of troops from different generations.” Jay Leno also praised Hope’s remarkable gifts: “impeccable comic timing, an encyclopedic memory of jokes and an effortless ability with quips.”

FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Spies Like Us (6-Dec-1985)
The Muppet Movie (22-Jun-1979)
Cancel My Reservation (21-Sep-1972)
How To Commit Marriage (7-Jul-1969) · Frank Benson
The Private Navy of Sgt. O’Farrell (8-May-1968)
Eight on the Lam (4-Apr-1967)
Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! (1-Jun-1966) · Tom Meade
I’ll Take Sweden (2-Jun-1965) · Bob Holcomb
A Global Affair (30-Jan-1964) · Frank Larrimore
Call Me Bwana (14-Jun-1963) · Matt
Critic’s Choice (13-Apr-1963) · Parker Ballantine
The Road to Hong Kong (27-Apr-1962) · Chester Babcock
Bachelor in Paradise (1-Nov-1961) · Adam J. Niles
The Facts of Life (14-Nov-1960) · Larry Gilbert
Alias Jesse James (20-Mar-1959) · Milford Farnsworth
Paris Holiday (5-Apr-1958) · Robert Leslie Hunter
Beau James (7-Jun-1957)
The Iron Petticoat (12-Dec-1956) · Chuck Lockwood
That Certain Feeling (4-Jun-1956)
The Seven Little Foys (31-May-1955) · Eddie Foy
Casanova’s Big Night (12-Apr-1954)
Here Come the Girls (22-Oct-1953) · Stanley Snodgrass
Off Limits (19-Feb-1953)
Road to Bali (19-Nov-1952) · Harold Gridley
Son of Paleface (14-Jul-1952)
My Favorite Spy (17-Dec-1951) · Peanuts White
The Lemon Drop Kid (8-Mar-1951) · Lemon Drop Kid
You Can Change the World (1951) · Himself
Fancy Pants (19-Jul-1950)
The Great Lover (23-Nov-1949)
Sorrowful Jones (5-Jun-1949)
The Paleface (24-Dec-1948) · “Painless” Peter Potter
Road to Rio (25-Dec-1947) · Hot Lips Barton
Where There’s Life (21-Nov-1947)
Variety Girl (29-Aug-1947) · Himself
My Favorite Brunette (19-Mar-1947) · Ronnie Jackson
Monsieur Beaucaire (4-Sep-1946)
Road to Utopia (27-Feb-1946) · Chester Hooton
The Princess and the Pirate (17-Nov-1944)
Let’s Face It (5-Aug-1943)
They Got Me Covered (4-Mar-1943)
Star Spangled Rhythm (18-Dec-1942) · Himself
Road to Morocco (5-Oct-1942) · Orville Jackson
My Favorite Blonde (18-Mar-1942) · Larry Haines
Louisiana Purchase (25-Dec-1941)
Nothing But the Truth (10-Oct-1941)
Caught in the Draft (25-Jun-1941)
Road to Zanzibar (11-Apr-1941) · Hubert Frazier
The Ghost Breakers (21-Jun-1940)
Road to Singapore (14-Mar-1940) · Ace Lannigan
The Cat and the Canary (10-Nov-1939) · Wally Campbell
Some Like It Hot (19-May-1939)
Never Say Die (14-Apr-1939) · John Kidley
Thanks for the Memory (11-Nov-1938)
Give Me a Sailor (19-Aug-1938)
College Swing (29-Apr-1938)
The Big Broadcast of 1938 (11-Feb-1938)

Source: Bob Hope

Source: Bob Hope – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Source: Bob Hope – Film Actor, Television Actor, Television Personality – Biography.com

Source: Bob Hope – IMDb

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