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Her and successes
Her later successes included Daniel ( 1920 ), La Gloire ( 1921 ), and Régine Armand ( 1922 ).
Her other film successes included " Sola " and " Notre Dame De Paris ", alongside Anthony Quinn.
Her use of foreign settings and androgynous themes made The Rose of Versailles and Orpheus no Mado " enormous successes ".
Her successes in theatre include the Royal Court Theatre and Broadway productions of Home.
Her film successes slowed a little during the 1950s and she also began appearing in television and on the stage.
Her successes at Wimbledon continued.
But several songwriting successes followed for artists like Billy Walker (" She Goes Walking Through My Mind ," " Traces of a Woman ," " It's Time to Love Her "), Cal Smith (" You Can't Housebreak a Tomcat ", " It Takes Me All Night Long "), and Nat Stuckey (" Sweet Thang And Cisco ").
Her melodrama Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham ... became India's highest-grossing film in the overseas market in 2001, and is one of her greatest commercial successes to date.
Her successes led to the conviction of many violators of the Volstead Act during Prohibition years.
Her film career has included both commercial and critical successes, ranging from teen romantic comedies such as 10 Things I Hate About You ( 1999 ) to dark art house pictures such as The Business of Strangers ( 2001 ).
Her performances in her second MGM film, Our Dancing Daughters ( 1928 ) opposite Joan Crawford ( with whom she appeared in three films ), and The Broadway Melody ( 1929 ) opposite Bessie Love were her greatest successes of the period, and her popularity allowed her to make a smooth transition into talking pictures.
Her husband Gennady, who could not deal with all Artamonova's successes, had by this time become an alcoholic and seen his own speed skating career vanish.
The next album Untitled, of 1992, featured the minor successes " Johnny Have You Seen Her " and " Chase the Clouds Away ".
Her films included the box office successes The Cock-Eyed World ( 1929 ), the semi-silent The Bridge of San Luis Rey ( 1929 ), and This Is the Night ( 1932 ).
Her other successes included The Rains Came ( 1939 ), Waterloo Bridge ( 1940 ), Beyond Tomorrow ( 1940 ), Dance, Girl, Dance ( 1940 ), The Mortal Storm ( 1940 ), and Kings Row ( 1942 ).
He later emigrated to America where he wrote Leave Her to Heaven ( February 1940 ), a drama set in London and Westcliff-on-Sea in Essex, which was shortly followed by major successes with Old Acquaintance ( NY December 1940-May 1941 ) and The Voice of the Turtle ( 1943 ), which ran for three seasons in New York and was filmed with Ronald Reagan.
" Her other successes included The Canterville Ghost ( 1944 ), Our Vines Have Tender Grapes ( 1945 ), and the first sound version of The Secret Garden ( 1949 ), but she was unable to make the transition to adult roles.
Films of this type became more common in early 2000s, as Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Amélie, Brotherhood of the Wolf, Y Tu Mama Tambien and Talk to Her enjoyed great successes in USA cinemas and home video sales.
Her solo albums were moderate successes.
Her final role in Now and Forever was taken by Carole Lombard, and provided Lombard with one of her earliest significant successes.
Her 1923 book The End of the House of Alard became a best-seller, and gave her prominence ; it was followed by other successes and her books enjoyed worldwide sales.
Her first successes came in collaboration with Myra Taylor ( died 22 March 2012 ), whom she had met at a writers ' workshop in Liverpool, before she embarked on a solo career.
Her many successes include A Successful Calamity ( 1917 ), A Little Journey ( 1918 ), Spring Cleaning ( 1923 ), The Distaff Side ( 1934 ), The Importance of Being Earnest ( which she also directed, 1939 ), When We Are Married ( 1939 ), Ladies in Retirement ( 1940 ), The Pirate ( 1942 ), Ten Little Indians ( 1944 ), Lady Windermere's Fan ( 1947 ), and The Madwoman of Chaillot ( 1948 ).
Follow-up successes included " Have You Seen Her " ( a cover of the Chi-Lites ) and " Pray " ( a beat sampled from Prince's " When Doves Cry " and Faith No More's " We Care a Lot "), which was his biggest hit in the US, peaking at # 2.

Her and Manhattan
Her most famous English-speaking role was as a bisexual Manhattan vampire in her third Hollywood film, the 1983 Tony Scott cult favorite The Hunger, which brought her a significant lesbian following due to her love scene with Susan Sarandon.
It was a relationship he explored repeatedly, particularly in films like Manhattan ( 1979 ) and Hannah and Her Sisters ( 1986 ).
Her father, Edward Zimmermann ( 1879 – 1977 ), was an accountant with James H. Dunham & Company, a Manhattan wholesale dry-goods company, and her mother, Agnes ( née Gardner ; 1883 – 1974 ), was a school teacher.
Her mother was one of the first women to design and found her own clothing firm, Ruth Manchester Ltd. Manchester started a singing career at an early age, learning the piano and harpsichord at the Manhattan School of Music and Arts, singing commercial jingles at age 15, and becoming a staff writer for Chappell Music while attending Manhattan's High School of Performing Arts.
Her other theatrical roles include leads at the Roundabout Theatre, Manhattan Theater Club, Playwrights Horizons and many regional theaters including the Long Wharf, Yale Repertory Theatre, Arena Stage, the Mark Taper Forum and the Actors Theatre of Louisville.
Her father, Burton Eugene Lane, was a Manhattan drama coach who ran an acting workshop with John Cassavetes, worked as a cab driver, and later taught humanities at City College.
Her romantic misadventures begin in New York City, lead her to Hollywood, and eventually take her back to Manhattan.
Her yearly dues of $ 3 allowed Trudy to swim at the tiny Manhattan indoor poor.
Her mother, Charlotte ( née Baum ), was a writer and press agent who was involved in women's and civil rights movements, and her father, John J. Sheedy, Jr., was a Manhattan advertising executive .< ref >
Her professional career began in the 1950s when she was featured in the South African jazz group the Manhattan Brothers, and appeared for the first time on a poster.
Her older sister, Maurine, took her to Manhattan Beach and to the local pool.
Her final appearance on film is uncredited role as the Duchess of Park Avenue ( Manhattan ) in 1984's The Cotton Club.
Her father was CEO and partial owner of a furniture manufacturing company in Manhattan ; he was also the president of Beth El Synagogue in New Rochelle for forty years.
Her mother was an administrator at the New York Institute of Technology in Manhattan.
Her first motion picture was made at a former Manhattan ( New York ) riding academy on West 61st Street.
Her family moved to Brooklyn while she was still a girl, and moved six more times before settling in Manhattan.
Her appearance in the magazine opened the door for her to headline and operate two different Playboy Jazz Clubs, both under Hugh Hefner ’ s overview, which she called Lainie ’ s Lounge East and West on opposite coasts, one in Los Angeles and the other in Manhattan.
Her parents moved from Puerto Rico and settled in Manhattan, New York, where Vidal and her two sisters Christina and Tanya were born.
Her daughter was born in 2001 at which time she took a break from acting to raise her children in Manhattan.
Her exposure on television made Smith a popular figure on the Manhattan social scene and provided fodder for her column which had, by then, been syndicated to nearly seventy newspapers.
Her art is held in the permanent collections of the following museums: Art Brut Connaissance & Diffusion Collection ( Paris and Prague ), Museum of American Folk Art ( Manhattan, New York ), Intuit: The Center for Intuitive and Outsider Art ( Chicago, Illinois ), L ’ Aracine Musee D ’ Art Brut ( Paris, France ), Collection de l ' art brut ( Lausanne, Switzerland ), and the American Visionary Art Museum ( Baltimore, Maryland ).
Her mother, Meredith ( née Nevins ), was a painter, former president of the Manhattan Graphics Center, and a printer, and her father, William Mayer, was a composer.
Her death was announced by her brother, David Wooldridge, who told the New York Times that Lincoln had died in her Manhattan nursing home after suffering deteriorating health for years following open heart surgery in 2007.
Her half-hour program, Prairie Stars on WOV in New York, was so popular that Country Music magazine named her the most famous country music personality in Manhattan.

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