Ad
related to: dolores costello actress
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Dolores Costello (September 17, 1903 [1] [note 1] – March 1, 1979) [2] [3] was an American film actress who achieved her greatest success during the era of silent movies. She was nicknamed "The Goddess of the Silent Screen" by her first husband, the actor John Barrymore .
Expensive Women is a 1931 American pre-Code film drama. It was produced by First National Pictures and distributed through their parent company Warner Bros. The film was directed by silent film veteran Hobart Henley and stars Dolores Costello.
Born in New York City, Costello was the youngest daughter of the prominent stage and pioneering film actor Maurice Costello and his actress wife Mae Costello (née Altschuk). [1] She had an older sister Dolores, who also became an actress and would go on to marry John Barrymore. [2]
Antonio Moreno, Helene Costello: Silent version survives, but the talkie version is presumed lost: Noah's Ark (Part Talkie) Dancer / Slave Girl: Michael Curtiz: Dolores Costello, George O'Brien, Noah Beery: A 108-minute version of the film survives, but the original 2 hour and 15 minute version is lost: 1929: Fancy Baggage (Part Talkie) Myrna ...
Greater Than a Crown is a 1925 American silent romantic comedy film directed by Roy William Neill and starring Edmund Lowe, Dolores Costello, and Margaret Livingston. [1] It was based on a 1918 novel The Lady from Long Acre by the British writer Victor Bridges. [2] [3] The novel had previously been adapted as the 1921 film The Lady from Longacre.
Barrymore was born in Los Angeles to John Barrymore (born John Blyth) and silent film actress Dolores Costello. [1] [2] His parents separated when he was 18 months old, and he rarely saw his father afterward.
An arrest was made last week in the New York deaths that have attracted national attention.
The film stars Freddie Bartholomew, Dolores Costello, and C. Aubrey Smith. The first film produced by David O. Selznick's Selznick International Pictures, it was the studio's most profitable film until Gone with the Wind. The film is directed by John Cromwell. [2] The film was critically well received and is now in the public domain. [3]