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The Bishop's Wife (also known as Cary and the Bishop's Wife) [5] is a 1947 American Christmas romantic fantasy comedy film directed by Henry Koster, starring Cary Grant, Loretta Young and David Niven. The plot is about an angel who helps a bishop with his problems.
Tony wants to marry her—because a wife cannot testify against her husband. Honey invites herself into the sheltered household, over the objections of Hobart and Miss Bragg, the housekeeper. While there, she introduces them to the latest music, of which they are completely ignorant, aided by many of the musicians Hobart met the night before.
Monica Collingwood (1908–1989) was an American film editor who was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing at the 1947 Academy Awards for the Henry Koster drama The Bishop's Wife (1947). [1] [2] [3]
Grimes in 2019. Grimes was born in Hollywood, California.Her father worked as a store manager for Safeway. [7] From an early age her mother took her for all sorts of lessons, training in violin, piano, singing and dance, and took her to auditions. [7]
Finally he was cast in a top picture for Goldwyn when he joined Cary Grant and Loretta Young for The Bishop's Wife (1947). Any prospects for career advancement were quickly dashed when Goldwyn lent him to Alexander Korda to return to the UK for the title role in Bonnie Prince Charlie (1948), a notorious flop.
He also had a credited role in another holiday movie, The Bishop's Wife (1947), starring Loretta Young, Cary Grant and David Niven. His film career slowed when he entered adulthood. He appeared in a number of TV shows including Spin and Marty and he made his last film in 1956. [2]
Kristoffer Polaha and Bethany Joy Lenz star in first ever movie with Biltmore Estate as the setting.
She also starred in films such as Born to Be Bad (1934), Call of the Wild (1935), The Crusades (1935), Eternally Yours (1939), The Stranger (1946), The Bishop's Wife (1947), and Key to the City (1950). Young moved to the relatively new medium of television, where she had a dramatic anthology series, The Loretta Young Show, from 1953 to 1961.