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her and 1938
Brigitte's mother enrolled Brigitte and her sister Marie-Jeanne ( born 5 May 1938 ) in dance.
Dean ( August 16, 1926 – February 24, 1997 ) and Florine " Kay " Plato ( December 27, 1938 – January 2, 1988 ) adopted the child in June 1965 and raised her in the San Fernando Valley, Los Angeles County.
When he died of canine distemper, his older brother, Kenzan-go, was presented to her as an official gift from the Japanese government in July 1938.
Ribbentrop was instrumental in February 1938 in persuading Hitler to recognize the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo and to renounce German claims upon her former colonies in the Pacific, which were now held by Japan.
It is interesting to note that when in 1938 André Breton traveled with his wife the painter Jacqueline Lamba to Mexico to meet Trotsky ; staying as the guest of Diego Rivera's former wife Guadalupe Marin ; he met Frida Kahlo and saw her paintings for the first time.
She was forcibly quarantined as a carrier of typhoid fever in 1907 for three years and then again from 1915 until her death in 1938.
Leigh appeared with Robert Taylor, Lionel Barrymore and Maureen O ' Sullivan in A Yank at Oxford ( 1938 ), the first of her films to receive attention in the United States.
William and Jane had two daughters, Jane Alice ( Jenny ), born January 1861, who developed epilepsy in her teens, and Mary ( May ) ( March 1862 – 1938 ), who became the editor of her father's works, a prominent socialist, and an accomplished designer and craftswoman.
She was then cast in Cole Porter's Leave It to Me !, making her Broadway debut in November 1938.
Although she appeared in nine films in her career, all between 1938 and 1943, she was generally passed over for the filmed version of the musical plays in which she starred.
Later, in September 1938, Salvador Dalí was invited by Gabrielle Coco Chanel to her house " La Pausa " in Roquebrune on the French Riviera.
In 1938, Dorothy Baker borrowed the titles of her friend Otis Ferguson's two articles and published the novel Young Man with a Horn.
Judith R. Harris ( b. 1938 ) graduated magna cum laude with her masters degree in psychology from Harvard University.
Gardner was buried in the Sunset Memorial Park, Smithfield, North Carolina, next to her brothers and their parents, Jonah ( 1878 – 1938 ) and Mollie Gardner ( 1883 – 1943 ).
Loren's parents had another child together, her sister Anna Maria Villani Scicolone, in 1938.
In 1938 the Independent Film Journal named her and several other stars as " box office poison " based on their supposed lack of popular appeal.
But it was her 1938 version of the nursery rhyme, " A-Tisket, A-Tasket ", a song she co-wrote, that brought her wide public acclaim.
According to Goldberg's autobiographical account in 1938, when the family traveled back to Kaunas in 1919, a Lithuanian border patrol stopped them and accused her father of being a " Bolshevik spy ".
In December 1938 Lester del Rey published " Helen O ' Loy " the story of a robot that is so much like a person she falls in love with her creator and becomes his ideal wife.
Shearer also took on another play popularized by Cornell in Romeo and Juliet ( 1936 ) ( her first film of the 30s to lose money ) and Marie Antoinette ( 1938 ) ( a budget of almost $ 2, 500, 000 was too great for the studio to expect a profit ), though their elaborate sets and costumes helped make the films immensely popular with audiences.
Bette Davis received three Oscar nominations for her screen work under Wyler, and won her second Oscar for her performance in Wyler's 1938 film Jezebel.

her and fictionalized
Their second was Louisa May, who fictionalized her experience with the family in her novel Little Women in 1868.
Yes, Virginia is a fictionalized version of her story.
In her fictionalized account of Murasaki's life, The Tale of Murasaki: A Novel, Liza Dalby has Murasaki involved in a romance during her travels with her father to Echizen Province.
Philippa Gregory's 2009 novel The White Queen follows a fictionalized account of Elizabeth's life from meeting her future husband, King Edward, up through the disappearance of her sons and the reign of her brother-in-law, Richard III.
" The film is a fictionalized account about the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 and stars Alice Brady as Mrs. O ' Leary, the owner of the cow which started the fire, and Tyrone Power and Don Ameche as her sons.
Luke Devenish's " Empress of Rome " novels, " Den of Wolves " ( 2008 ) and " Nest of Vipers " ( 2010 ), have Livia as central character in a fictionalized account of her life and times.
* The film is heavily fictionalized for dramatic purposes and completely omits any mention of Marie's family in Paris, including her sister Bronislawa, an obstetrician, with whom she was very close.
In The Lady Royal, a fictionalized biography by Molly Costain Haycraft, Joan is portrayed as a rival to her cousin, Isabella, for the affections of Enguerrand de Coucy.
One of them, " 5 Minutes Miss Brown ", was a fictionalized account of her rise to fame.
Two books published posthumously in her husband's name, The Heart of a Soldier, As Revealed in the Intimate Letters of Gen ' l George E. Pickett ( published in 1913 ) and Soldier of the South: General Pickett's War Letters to His Wife ( 1928 ), have been described as " unreliable works that were fictionalized by Pickett's wife.
Guinan returned to the screen with two sound pictures, playing slightly fictionalized versions of herself as a speakeasy proprietress in Queen of the Night Clubs ( 1929 ) and then Broadway Through a Keyhole ( 1933, written by Winchell ) shortly before her death.
* In the video game Tomb of the Lost Queen, a fictionalized version of her tomb is used as the game's premise.
Although Lillian Hellman claimed the story was based on true events that occurred early in her life, the filmmakers later learned that most of it was fictionalized.
* Mona Simpson's A Regular Guy ( 1996 ) is a fictionalized version of the life of her biological brother, Apple Computers co-founder Steve Jobs.
* A fictionalized account of her around the world trip was used in the comic book " Julie Walker is The Phantom " published by Moonstone Books ( Story: Elizabeth Massie, art: Paul Daly, colors: Stephen Downer ).
For her portrayal of Mrs. Molly O ' Leary — a fictionalized version of Catherine O ' Leary – in 1937's In Old Chicago, Brady won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress.
Drawn from the play of the same name by Maurine Dallas Watkins which was in turn based on the true story of Beulah Annan, fictionalized as Roxie Hart ( Phyllis Haver ), and her spectacular murder of her boyfriend.
* Fanny, Being the True History of the Adventures of Fanny Hackabout-Jones ( 1980 ) ( a retelling of ' Fanny Hill ' by Erica Jong purports to tell the story from Fanny's point of view, with Cleland as a character she complains fictionalized her life ).
Due to the melodramatic appeal of her story, many fictionalized accounts of her life were written at the time and up to the present day, but the historical record is somewhat ignored and liberties are taken to maximize dramatic effect.

her and autobiography
Virgilia Peterson, a critic by trade, has turned her critical eye pitilessly and honestly on herself in an autobiography more of the mind and heart than of specific events.
Christie describes entirely different working methods for every book in her autobiography thus contradicts this claim, more likely from theatre, screen film and TV adaptations that vary perpetrators to keep viewers coming back.
Every book followed a different train of thought, from inspiration to solution, according to her autobiography.
Christopher Hitchens, in his autobiography, describes a dinner with Christie and her husband, Max Mallowan, that became increasingly uncomfortable as the night wore on, where " The anti-Jewish flavour of the talk was not to be ignored or overlooked, or put down to heavy humour or generational prejudice.
In the 15th century, Leonor López de Córdoba, a Spanish noblewoman, wrote her Memorias, which may be the first autobiography in Castillian.
The earliest known autobiography in English is the early 15th-century Booke of Margery Kempe, describing among other things her pilgrimage to the Holy Land and visit to Rome.
While an autobiography typically focuses on the " life and times " of the writer, a memoir has a narrower, more intimate focus on his or her own memories, feelings and emotions.
In 1997 Hill published her autobiography, Speaking Truth to Power, in which she chronicled her role in the Clarence Thomas confirmation controversy and wrote that creating a better society had been a motivating force in her life.
The sequence implicitly labeled Baez a limousine liberal, a charge she took to heart, as detailed years later in her 1987 autobiography, And A Voice To Sing With: A Memoir.
In her 1980 autobiography, Shelley Winters claimed to have had a long affair with him.
In her autobiography, Retrospection and Introspection, she wrote:
Twain also expressed grave doubts about the authorship of Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, showing through content analysis that the quality of the writing was much better than any of Eddy's previous or subsequent work ( for example her autobiography and her later writings in the Christian Science Journal ):
" Barrymore later described this period of her life in her autobiography, Little Girl Lost.
Day would later call it, in her autobiography, her best film.
In 1975, Day released her autobiography, Doris Day: Her Own Story, an " as-told-to " work with A. E. Hotchner.
After publishing her autobiography, Day married one last time.
She was the wife of Sir Michael Redgrave and mother of Vanessa, Lynn and Corin, and published her autobiography, Life Among the Redgraves, in 1988.
As documented in her 1994 autobiography, initially, much of Wagoner's audience was unhappy, that Norma Jean, the performer whom Parton had replaced, had left the show, and was reluctant to accept Parton ( sometimes chanting loudly for Norma Jean from the audience ).
Dolores Fuller's autobiography, A Fuller Life: Hollywood, Ed Wood and Me, co-authored by Winnipeg writer Stone Wallace and her husband Philip Chamberlin, was published in 2008.
Since her death in 1968 and the publication of her daughter Imogen's autobiography, A Childhood at Green Hedges, Blyton has emerged as an emotionally immature, unstable and often malicious figure.

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