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Exchanging rings - George and Lorena - c. 1900s - (Via)
Lynda Carter wants you… to wear Young Edwardian sweaters. 1977 ad.
- Are you saying I’m out?
Time for some Peter Cushing: Peter with his father George in 1952.
(Click image for source).
50 favourite Anton Walbrook Scenes:
30/50: Suvorin stakes everything on a game of Faro with Andrei - The Queen of Spades
‘He got out of it in the most magnificently dramatic way, I admire his acting. If I hadn’t known I would’ve sworn he was indignant.’
-Catherine Winslow on Sir Robert Morton
Ralph Richardson is dubbed by Werner Hinz (1903 - 1985) one of Germany’s most renowned character actors in “The Fallen Idol” (1948) and in “Anna Karenina” (1948)
The English and his German fellow actor had pretty much in common. They were almost of the same age and had a long and highly successful career until their deaths. They prefered the theatrical work to film. Both played Cyrano de Bergerac, Peer Gynt and Prospero. They often played in the same plays but in different roles (for instance “Richard II.”, “Hamlet”, “Othello”, “The Wild Duck” and “Home”)
They both were happily married to fellow actresses for a very long time (Richardson for 39 years, Hinz for 51 years) and often appeared with them on stage but only very rarely in film.
They shared a love for animals: Richardson for his parrot Josè and his ferrets, Hinz for his dogs.
They even shared the problem of hair loss already beginning at an early age.
Werner Hinz must have esteemed Ralph Richardson very much. He was always a very busy actor and only very rarely dubbed foreign fellow actors. It is significant that he only dubbed one actor twice - Ralph Richardson.
For further reading:
www.steffi-line.de/archiv_text/nost_filmdeutsch2/08h_hinz.htm
Original caption: The English actor Leslie Howard plays dulcimer. About 1935
Anne Francis, Lucille Ball, and Barbara Stanwyck at the Oscars 1966
John Barrymore as Hamlet, 1922.
Helen Hayes, who later appeared with Barrymore in Night Flight (1933), recalled his performance as Hamlet as “the finest I’ve seen”:
[He] had one thing that all other actors, for me, have lacked. He wasn’t acting the Prince of Denmark—he was a prince. He had a regal [presence]—without being stuffy, naturally, cause there was nothing ever stuffy about a Barrymore. They had the air of royalty, and he had it more than any of them. You were not watching an actor trying to behave like a prince…He was wonderful, in so many different lights and colors. And of course, he was so beautiful to look at.” (Helen Hayes, Colliers, 1951)
"You were missed … when you left." “Can’t think by whom.” “No. But you were.” — Endeavour | 1x03 | Rocket
Leslie Howard e David Niven sul set di The First of the Few - Spitfire di cui Leslie è il regista.
Alfred Hitchcock: The 1930s
Anton your FAAAAAAACE: Allotria edition
Michael and Vanessa Redgrave