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Hush... Hush | A Wisdom Archive on Hush... Hush |  | Hush... Hush A selection of articles related to Hush... Hush |  |
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Hush... Hush
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Hush... Hush | |
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 |  |  | Hush... Hush: Encyclopedia II - Ellen Corby - Actress
Ellen Corby - 1930s.
Rafter Romance (1933)
Sons of the Desert (1933)
Twisted Rails (1934)
Speed Limited (1935)
The Broken Coin (1936)
Ellen Corby - 1940s.
Cornered (1945)
The Scarlet Horseman (1946)
The Spiral Staircase (1946)
From This Day Forward (1946)
The Dark Corner (1946)
The Truth About Murder (19 ...
See also:Ellen Corby, Ellen Corby - Actress, Ellen Corby - 1930s, Ellen Corby - 1940s, Ellen Corby - 1950s, Ellen Corby - 1960s, Ellen Corby - 1970s, Ellen Corby - 1980s, Ellen Corby - 1990s, Ellen Corby - Posthumous, Ellen Corby - Writer, Ellen Corby - Miscellaneous Crew Read more here: » Ellen Corby: Encyclopedia II - Ellen Corby - Actress |
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 |  |  | Hush... Hush: Encyclopedia II - Academy Award for Best Art Direction - 1950sFor 1957 films this award became a single award.
1957 Ted Haworth, Robert Priestley - Sayonara
Hal Pereira, George W. Davis, Samuel M. Comer, Ray Moyer - Funny Face
William A. Horning, Gene Allen, Edwin B. Willis, Richard Pefferle - Les Girls
Walter Holscher, William Kiernan, Louis Diage - Pal Joey
William A. Horning, Urie McCleary, Edwin B. Willis, Hugh Hunt - Raintree County
1958 William A. Horning, Preston Ames, Henry Grace, F. Keogh G ...
See also:Academy Award for Best Art Direction, Academy Award for Best Art Direction - 1920s, Academy Award for Best Art Direction - 1930s, Academy Award for Best Art Direction - 1940s, Academy Award for Best Art Direction - 1950s, Academy Award for Best Art Direction - 1960s, Academy Award for Best Art Direction - 1970s, Academy Award for Best Art Direction - 1980s, Academy Award for Best Art Direction - 1990s, Academy Award for Best Art Direction - 2000s Read more here: » Academy Award for Best Art Direction: Encyclopedia II - Academy Award for Best Art Direction - 1950s |
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 |  |  | Hush... Hush: Encyclopedia II - Joseph Cotten - Biography and Career
Joseph Cotten - Early Life and Career.
Born in Petersburg, Virginia, Cotten worked as an advertising agent after graduating from the Washington, D.C., Hickman School, where he studied acting. His work as a journalist, specifically a theatre critic, inspired him to become more involved in theatre productions, first in Virginia, and later in New York. Cotten made his Broadway debut in 1930, and soon became friends with up-and-coming actor/director/producer Orson Welles. In 1937 he joined Welles' Mercury Theater Company, with which he starred in productions o ...
See also:Joseph Cotten, Joseph Cotten - Biography and Career, Joseph Cotten - Early Life and Career, Joseph Cotten - Citizen Kane, Joseph Cotten - Collaborations with Welles, Joseph Cotten - The Forties and Fifties, Joseph Cotten - The Sixties and Seventies, Joseph Cotten - Heaven's Gate, Joseph Cotten - Legacy, Joseph Cotten - Filmography Read more here: » Joseph Cotten: Encyclopedia II - Joseph Cotten - Biography and Career |
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 |  |  | Hush... Hush: Encyclopedia II - Bette Davis - The early yearsDavis was born to Harlow Morrell Davis, a descendant of Welsh Puritans, and Ruth Favor, a descendant of Huguenot pioneers. In 1918 Davis' father ran off, leaving Bette and her sister, Barbara, to be raised in genteel poverty by their mother, who had aspired to be an actress. As a child Bette aspired to be a dancer, until she decided that actors led a more glamorous life. Upon graduation from Cushing Academy, a prep school in Ashburnham, Massachusetts, Davis was denied admission to Eva LeGallienne's Manhattan Civic Repertory because she was c ...
See also:Bette Davis, Bette Davis - The early years, Bette Davis - The ingenue, Bette Davis - The middle years, Bette Davis - The established star, Bette Davis - The later years, Bette Davis - Death, Bette Davis - Academy Awards and nominations, Bette Davis - Filmography Read more here: » Bette Davis: Encyclopedia II - Bette Davis - The early years |
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 |  |  | Hush... Hush: Encyclopedia II - Academy Award for Costume Design - 1950sFor 1957 the awards were combined into a single award.
1957 Orry-Kelly - Les Girls
Charles LeMaire - An Affair to Remember
Edith Head, Hubert de Givenchy - Funny Face
Jean Louis, - Pal Joey
Walter Plunkett - Raintree County
1958 Cecil Beaton - Gigi
Jean Louis - Bell, Book and Candle
Ralph Jester, Edith Head, John Jensen - The Buccaneer)
Charles LeMaire, Mary Wills - A Certain SmileSee also: Academy Award for Costume Design, Academy Award for Costume Design - 1940s, Academy Award for Costume Design - 1950s, Academy Award for Costume Design - 1960s, Academy Award for Costume Design - 1970s, Academy Award for Costume Design - 1980s, Academy Award for Costume Design - 1990s, Academy Award for Costume Design - 2000s Read more here: » Academy Award for Costume Design: Encyclopedia II - Academy Award for Costume Design - 1950s |
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 |  |  | Hush... Hush: Encyclopedia II - Bette Davis - The middle years
Bette Davis - The established star.
Davis was elected the ninth president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, whose award she claimed to have named "Oscar," but only served from October to December 1941 when she resigned. With the outbreak of WWII, Davis took on a patriotic role both as one of the founders and president of the Hollywood Canteen for visiting armed forces servicemen.
The early 1940s saw Davis' popularity continue to grow with such films as The Letter (1940) and The ...
See also:Bette Davis, Bette Davis - The early years, Bette Davis - The ingenue, Bette Davis - The middle years, Bette Davis - The established star, Bette Davis - The later years, Bette Davis - Death, Bette Davis - Academy Awards and nominations, Bette Davis - Filmography Read more here: » Bette Davis: Encyclopedia II - Bette Davis - The middle years |
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 |  |  | Hush... Hush: Encyclopedia II - Olivia de Havilland - Private lifeDe Haviland was married and divorced from novelist Marcus Goodrich between 1946 and 1953, by whom she had a son, Benjamin, whom she has outlived. She later married Pierre Galante from 1955 to 1979, producing a daughter, Giselle, in 1956. When de Havilland and Galante divorced they remained on good terms, and she nursed him through his final illness in Paris, which was the stated reason for her absence from the star-studded 70th Anniversary of the Oscars in 1998 where former winners attended and were shown seated, in alphabetical order (from ...
See also:Olivia de Havilland, Olivia de Havilland - Early life, Olivia de Havilland - Career, Olivia de Havilland - Private life, Olivia de Havilland - Filmography, Olivia de Havilland - Television work Read more here: » Olivia de Havilland: Encyclopedia II - Olivia de Havilland - Private life |
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 |  |  | Hush... Hush: Encyclopedia II - Olivia de Havilland - Early lifeHavilland was born in Tokyo, Japan, and is the elder daughter of Walter de Havilland, a British patent attorney with a practice in Japan, and the former Lilian Augusta Ruse, an actress known by her stage name of Lilian (or Lillian) Fontaine, who married in 1914. Her father was the half-brother of the late Charles de Havilland, who was the father of Sir Geoffrey de Havilland, the famous aviation pioneer (who died in 1946). Her younger sister is the actress Joan Fontaine (also born in Tokyo, on October 22, 1917), from whom she has been famously estranged ...
See also:Olivia de Havilland, Olivia de Havilland - Early life, Olivia de Havilland - Career, Olivia de Havilland - Private life, Olivia de Havilland - Filmography, Olivia de Havilland - Television work Read more here: » Olivia de Havilland: Encyclopedia II - Olivia de Havilland - Early life |
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 |  |  | Hush... Hush: Encyclopedia II - Mary Astor - ScandalsIn March 1934, Astor was sued by her parents, Otto and Helen Langhanke, for support and a public family feud burst out violently as they all went threshing into court hurling charges.
The Langhankes said they did not even have enough money for the necessities of life; the only money they had received from their daughter in the last six months was $60 in grocery coupons, and they had to sell some of their furniture to survive. They also cited a foreclosure notice on their home, saying their daughte ...
See also:Mary Astor, Mary Astor - Silent movie career, Mary Astor - New beginnings, Mary Astor - Scandals, Mary Astor - Career continues, Mary Astor - Middle years, Mary Astor - Later life Read more here: » Mary Astor: Encyclopedia II - Mary Astor - Scandals |
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 |  |  | Hush... Hush: Encyclopedia II - Bette Davis - The later yearsIn 1977 Davis became the first woman to receive the American Film Institute's Lifetime Achievement Award, and in 1979 she won a Best Actress Emmy. Davis walked out on her last film, Wicked Stepmother, which was released after her death in 1989, although her scenes were retained. She wrote three biographies, The Lonely Life in 1962, Mother Goddam in 1974, and This 'N' That in 1987. Bette Davis, The Lonely Life 1990, was pub ...
See also:Bette Davis, Bette Davis - The early years, Bette Davis - The ingenue, Bette Davis - The middle years, Bette Davis - The established star, Bette Davis - The later years, Bette Davis - Death, Bette Davis - Academy Awards and nominations, Bette Davis - Filmography Read more here: » Bette Davis: Encyclopedia II - Bette Davis - The later years |
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