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DeMille and married
His first wife was the adopted daughter of Cecil B. DeMille, the actress Katherine DeMille, whom he married in 1937.
In 1965, Quinn and DeMille were divorced due to his affair with Italian costume designer Jolanda Addolori whom he married in 1966.
In 1927, while researching The Skyscraper for DeMille Studios, Ayn Rand visited the building and, while waiting for her contact to arrive, went to the nearby Hollywood Branch Library, where she was reunited with Frank O ' Connor, whom she had lost track of 6 months earlier when DeMille's The King of Kings finished shooting ; Rand and O ' Connor then began dating, were married in 1929 until his death in 1979.
Bess Flowers was first married on September 2, 1923, in Ventura County, California, to Cullen Tate ( 1894 – 1947 ), an assistant to Cecil B. DeMille.
His sister, Blanche, married Samuel Goldwyn and in 1913 Lasky and Goldwyn teamed with Cecil B. DeMille and Oscar Apfel to form the Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company.
Harris continued to work in film in the early 1940s, largely through the kindness of her former director, Cecil B. DeMille, who cast her in bit parts in 1942's Reap the Wild Wind ( starring Paulette Goddard, who, like Harris, was once married to Charlie Chaplin ), and 1944's The Story of Dr. Wassell.

DeMille and Constance
* Constance Adams DeMille ( 1874-1960 ), actress and wife of director Cecil B. DeMille.
Richard had been adopted by Cecil B. and Constance DeMille to avoid a family scandal.

DeMille and on
DeMille began his career as an actor on the Broadway stage in the theatrical company of Charles Frohman in 1900.
DeMille had a reputation for tyrannical behavior on the set, and he despised actors who were unwilling to take physical risks.
DeMille was, however, adept at directing " thousands of extras ", and many of his pictures included spectacular set pieces, such as the parting of the Red Sea in both versions of The Ten Commandments, the toppling of the pagan temple in Samson and Delilah, train wrecks in The Road to Yesterday, Union Pacific and The Greatest Show on Earth, and the destruction of a zeppelin in Madame Satan.
DeMille also appeared as himself in Paramount's 1947 all-star musical comedy Variety Girl and he narrated many of his later films, as well as appearing on screen in the introduction to The Ten Commandments.
Following the favorable response to the vivid color photography, shot partly on location in the Canadian Rockies, DeMille decided to always use Technicolor in his films.
Also representative of his penchant for the spectacular was the 1952 production of The Greatest Show on Earth which gave DeMille an Oscar for best picture and a nomination for best director.
In 1949 or 1950, DeMille was recruited by Allen Dulles and Frank Wisner to serve on the board of the anti-communist National Committee for a Free Europe, the public face of the organization that oversaw the Radio Free Europe service.
Near the end of his life, DeMille began pre-production work on a film biography of Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell, the founder of the Scout Movement and had asked David Niven to star in the film, which was never made.
Though DeMille completed the film, it proved to be his last, for he never fully recovered, and died on January 21, 1959 of heart failure.
He was next employed as a prop boy and general assistant on an unspecified film directed by Cecil B. DeMille ( Hawks never named the film in later interviews and DeMille made five films roughly in that time period ).
Nevertheless, counting on the aficionado, publishers issued spy novels by writers popular during the Cold War proper, among them Harlots Ghost ( 1991 ) by Norman Mailer and novels by Nelson DeMille, W. E. B.
Senator Joseph McCarthy was pursuing Communists at the time, and Cecil B. DeMille was one of his supporters ; another Best Picture nominee, High Noon, was produced by Carl Foreman, who would soon be on the Hollywood blacklist.
A 1939 radio adaptation of the story, starring Laurence Olivier and Edna Best, was presented by Cecil B. DeMille on Lux Radio Theatre, Hollywood.
While DeMille entertains Norma, many of the older guards, technicians and extras on the set recognize her and welcome her back.
Also in 1933, " while acting on stage in Eight Bells, a talent scout for Paramount Pictures reportedly arranged a screen test which came to the attention of producer-director Cecil B. DeMille in Hollywood.
It's a cover of the Mariah Carey Christmas classic " All I want for Christmas Is You " Its available on iTunes, under her new pseudonym Evelyn DeMille.
Fields was listed in the 1940 census as single and living at 2015 DeMille Drive ( Cecil B. DeMille lived at 2000, the only other address on the street ).
* The Virginian ( 1914 film ), a silent film directed by Cecil B. DeMille and starring Dustin Farnum, based on the novel
The gold spike used in the 1939 Cecil B. DeMille movie, Union Pacific depicting the event, was the same one used in 1869, on loan to DeMille by its curator, Stanford University.
The center piece event of the celebration occurred on April 28 with the World Premier of the Cecil B. DeMille feature motion picture " Union Pacific " which took place simultaneously in the city's Omaha, Orpheum, and Paramount theaters.
Director DeMille had a cameo in Billy Wilder's film Sunset Boulevard in a scene where the character of Norma Desmond meets with the director on a film set at Paramount studios.

DeMille and August
Cecil Blount DeMille ( August 12, 1881 – January 21, 1959 ) was an American film director and Academy Award-winning film producer in both silent and sound films.
Sir Thomas Sean Connery ( born 25 August 1930 ) is a Scottish actor and producer who has won an Academy Award, two BAFTA Awards ( one of them being a BAFTA Academy Fellowship Award ) and three Golden Globes ( including the Cecil B. DeMille Award and a Henrietta Award ).
* August 12 – Cecil B. DeMille, American film director and producer ( d. 1959 )

DeMille and had
DeMille claimed he wrote the play and that Belasco had plagiarized DeMille's work without compensation.
Cecil B. DeMille was a leading figure in the increased use of the Insert, and by 1918 he had reached the point of including about 9 Inserts in every 100 shots in The Whispering Chorus.
Joe and Max, meanwhile, learn that Cole had called because the studio wants to rent her car and has no interest in her script ( DeMille tells an assistant in private that the script is awful ).
After the tour ended Kosloff had been hired by Cecil B. DeMille to perform as well as contribute designs.
Rambova's work had been used in four DeMille films, including, Why Change Your Wife ?, which featured Gloria Swanson and Thomas Meighan, before her signing with Nazimova.
As a boy, he had a paper route, and delivered the Los Angeles Times to Cecil B. DeMille and other people in the film industry.
In 1913, Cecil B. DeMille, in association with Jesse Lasky, leased a barn with studio facilities on the southeast corner of Selma and Vine Streets from the Burns and Revier Studio and Laboratory, which had been established there.
The revamped musical had a new song, " Every Movie's A Circus ", a new set, and new stars, Betty Buckley and John Barrowman. Michael Bauer, who had played DeMille in the original production replaced Benzali as Max, a role he played until the end of the London run ( and subsequently on the UK tour and the BBC concert ) and Anita Louise Combe
In his 1959 autobiography, DeMille alleged that a former member of the American Communist Party later confided to him that the party had consciously orchestrated these circumstances of his exclusion from radio, as they considered him to be one of their two foremost enemies in radio.
It was donated to the State of Texas in 1961 by the Fraternal Order of Eagles, a civic organization, with the support of Cecil B. DeMille, who had directed the film The Ten Commandments.
Although DeMille claimed her conduct had caused numerous and costly production delays, in a landmark ruling, Goudal won the suit when DeMille was unwilling to provide his studio's financial records to support his claim of financial losses.

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