En mi biblioteca hay un par de biografías, siempre pienso que algún día tendré que leerlas, aunque ahora es imposible con todo cerrado a cal y canto
Esta cuenta de twitter está muy bien:
Re: Bette Davis
22En estos días todo lo que leo es por esta pag que os comenté y tienen material de Bette,aprovecharé.
By Bert Six,1935
By Bert Six,1935
Re: Bette Davis
23Madeleine Elster ¿qué tal llevas la lectura de la bio de la más grande?
Bette Davis by Irving Lippman (Warner Brothers, 1930s)
Bette Davis by Irving Lippman (Warner Brothers, 1930s)
Re: Bette Davis
26Es que en esa plataforma hay unos cuantos libros de Bette,no sé por cual decidirme.
Ginger Rogers and Bette Davis,pose together at the Ambassador Hotel’s Cocoanut Grove nightclub. February 23, 1932.
By Louise Dahl-Wolfe, 1938
By George Hurrell, 1940.
Ginger Rogers and Bette Davis,pose together at the Ambassador Hotel’s Cocoanut Grove nightclub. February 23, 1932.
By Louise Dahl-Wolfe, 1938
By George Hurrell, 1940.
Re: Bette Davis
27Ah, ok. Un poco de contexto sobre "The Little Foxes" y la pérfida Regina Giddens:
BETTE DAVIS BY NED SCOTT, THE LITTLE FOXES, 1941
When the flamboyant Tallulah Bankhead originated the role on Broadway, in 1939, Brooks Atkinson wrote, in the Times, “Sometimes our Tallulah walks buoyantly through a part without much feeling for the whole design. But as the malevolent lady of ‘The Little Foxes,’ she plays with superb command . . . constantly aware of the poisonous spirit within.” When Bette Davis agreed to play Regina in William Wyler’s deep and eerie 1941 screen adaptation, she insisted that she had nothing to add to what Bankhead had done with the part. But her director did. Wyler made Davis look like a construction. He buttoned her up in close-fitting shirts and high collars, then hemmed her in with closeups in which she had a Kabuki pallor, her spoiled rosebud of a mouth puckering out of her white face. It was these constrictions that allowed Davis to explode so forcefully, and with such calculated contempt, especially in Regina’s final, chilling conversation with her ailing husband:
REGINA: I was lonely when I was young. Yes, lonely, but not in the way people usually mean. I was lonely for all the things I wasn’t going to get. Everybody was so busy at home, so little place for what I wanted. Then Papa died and gave Ben and Oscar all the money.
HORACE: So you married me?
REGINA: Yes, I thought you’d get the world for me. You were a small-town clerk then. You haven’t changed.
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2010 ... ns-world-2
BETTE DAVIS BY NED SCOTT, THE LITTLE FOXES, 1941
Re: Bette Davis
29Ahora que los ánimos no están para dramones ni cosas demasiado sesudas, me apetece revisionar esta simpática peliculita, una de las pocas comedias que protagonizó Bette:
Re: Bette Davis
31Re: Bette Davis
32Ya subiré cosas de los libros.
Actresses Fay Bainter (left) and Bette Davis with Jack L. Warner, president of Warner Bros. Studios, at the 11th Academy Awards in 1939, where Davis won the Oscar for Best Actress in a Leading Role and Bainter the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for their respective performances in the Warner Bros. film Jezebel (USA, 1938, dir. William Wyler) | photo Schuyler Crail / © MPTV
"Go easy on the glamour, George. I'm not the type." - Bette Davis to photographer George Hurrell (1939)
By Jack Freulich, 1931
Bette Davis (1908 - 1989) who was born in Lowell, Massachusetts and studied at two drama schools before being signed to Universal in 1930. (Photo via John Kobal Foundation/Getty Images)
Actresses Fay Bainter (left) and Bette Davis with Jack L. Warner, president of Warner Bros. Studios, at the 11th Academy Awards in 1939, where Davis won the Oscar for Best Actress in a Leading Role and Bainter the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for their respective performances in the Warner Bros. film Jezebel (USA, 1938, dir. William Wyler) | photo Schuyler Crail / © MPTV
"Go easy on the glamour, George. I'm not the type." - Bette Davis to photographer George Hurrell (1939)
By Jack Freulich, 1931
Bette Davis (1908 - 1989) who was born in Lowell, Massachusetts and studied at two drama schools before being signed to Universal in 1930. (Photo via John Kobal Foundation/Getty Images)
Re: Bette Davis
35By Bert Longworth, 1930.
By Elmer Fryer at the Del Monte Hotel, c. 1932.
Por el mismo Elmer F en 1933
Y en 1934 y 1935 idem
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt8847616/
By George Hurrell,1938.
By Bert Six, 1941
By Elmer Fryer at the Del Monte Hotel, c. 1932.
Por el mismo Elmer F en 1933
Y en 1934 y 1935 idem
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt8847616/
By George Hurrell,1938.
By Bert Six, 1941