Jump to content
Bellazon

Sergenius

Members
  • Posts

    327
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Sergenius

  1. If you ever get tired of Carla, and I know that's highly unlikely if not blasphemous, I would so buy that computer.
  2. I watched Gentlemen Prefer Blondes the other day, my first Monroe film, and loved it. I like how she went through the whole movie manipulating men, by pretending to be a dumb blonde. Very much like she fooled most people in real life.
  3. About 200,000 from you, I'm sure. Still, good news.
  4. Thank you, all! Saloni Aswani I don't know about you, but I said WOW. And soon after, I said WOW again.
  5. They do resemble each other, sometimes. Not often, but they do. Mostly with their eyes closed. Then again, maybe that's where the comparisons end haha. I do hope Carla would lend Gio that outfit she's wearing in your sig, Ed. And then return it, of course.
  6. Thanks, Ed! She looks so much better when they don't overdo her makeup. What's there to improve, anyway?
  7. Ooh la la! Thanks, everyone.
  8. 1. Good old Google images, no specific site. 2. It has a nice ring to it and all, but my nickname is meant to be a reference to my real name and my... eh, high intellect? Not really, I just thought it sounded clever.
  9. Whoooooooooo are you? Who, who, who, who? Giorgia Palmas
  10. This thread rocks as usual, thanks Ed. At this point you really deserve a date with Carla or something.
  11. There is apparently, an upcoming Scorsese film not starring Dicaprio. I'm looking forward to it for that sole reason.
  12. Audrey Hepburn Source: Doctor Macro
  13. Sergenius

    Jane Greer

    Jane Greer (1924 - 2001) Date of Birth: 9 September 1924, Washington, District of Columbia, USA Date of Death: 24 August 2001, Los Angeles, California, USA (cancer) Birth Name: Bettejane Greer Height: 5' 5" (1.65 m) Spouse: Edward Lasker (20 August 1947 - 1963) (divorced) 3 children / Rudy Vallee (2 December 1943 - 27 July 1944) (divorced) Mini Bio: One day in 1940 a pretty 15-year-old girl who had worked as a child model was asked by her party date why she was pulling such a funny face. Checking in the mirror, she was appalled to find that the muscles on the left side of her face had gone totally slack and were paralyzed that way. Diagnosed with Bell's palsy, a rare neurological disorder from which people at the time generally did not recover, the aspiring actress had for a time to close her left eye with her hand when she went to sleep and had to push the left corner of her mouth up into a frozen smile before she went off to school each day. The painstaking therapy she performed on her face not only peaked her ambition to act but also dispelled the disfigurement almost entirely, though one wonders if it may have contributed to the patented look important in making Jane Greer one of the most intriguing performers of her day--a calm, quizzical gaze and an enigmatic expression that led RKO to promote her as "the woman with the Mona Lisa smile". Although her appearance as a WAC model in LIFE led to several screen tests, studios like Paramount dismissed the lovely young ingenue as being identical to many already under contract, and quirky billionaire and dabbler in film Howard Hughes seemed in no rush to get Greer onscreen. Aided by ex-husband but still-ardent admirer Rudy Vallee, Greer took the bull by the horns and landed a contract with RKO. Making a modest impression in several slinky villainous parts led to her sympathetic starring role in "They Won't Believe Me" (1947) opposite Susan Hayward and an atypically caddish Robert Young. The role that really put Greer on top, however, was her Kathie Moffett in "Out of the Past" (1947), now recognized as one of the greatest entries in the film noir cycle. Portraying a seemingly innocent woman on the run from her gangster lover who turns hard-as-nails as she manipulates a feckless detective, eventually killing them both, Greer used her beautifully modulated alto voice and understated intensity to manage the considerable feat of stealing the film from Robert Mitchum and Kirk Douglas. Greer enjoyed good starring roles in several other RKO films of the period ("Station West" 1948, "The Big Steal" 1949), but after Hughes bought the studio, the quantity and quality of its output declined sharply. Restless, Greer moved to MGM, but it, too, unsettled after the ouster of Louis B. Mayer, the loss of its theatre chain and the competition of TV, did not seem to know what to do with her. She demonstrated a light, sympathetic comedy touch in the too-mild "You for Me" (1952) and dramatic sensitivity in the sometimes bathetic "The Clown" (1953), but director Richard Thorpe insisted she copy exactly Mary Astor's marvelous turn in "The Prisoner of Zenda" (1937) for the studio's scene-for-scene 1952 remake, leaving her a lovely but less-than-vital aristocrat. By this point, however, the ambition that had gotten Greer started had also diminished as she came to love new roles as mother and homemaker. Through the 50s and early 60s Greer maintained a modest career workload mostly on TV, though she did appear in two fine films, the adventure "Run for the Sun" (1956) and the Lon Chaney biopic "Man of a Thousand Faces" (1957), for which star James Cagney had requested her. (Unfortunately, her virtuous second wife role suffered by comparison with Dorothy Malone's neurotic ex.) Illness and a lack of roles kept Greer inactive for a time, but in the 80s, silver-haired and still attractive, she cropped up intermittently on series TV and in several feature films, generally in kindly mother roles. Occasionally, however, the old vodka-in-the-OJ edge was allowed to shine through, most notably in "Against All Odds" (1984), a steamy but inferior makeover of "Out of the Past" in which Greer still managed to steal the spotlight as Rachel Ward's nasty mother. *Mini Bio taken from IMDb and Yahoo Movies * Photos taken from Film Noir Photos
  14. Jesus Christ! Best ones in a while.
×
×
  • Create New...