Filmographies

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 The Deborah Kerr Fellowship League - A Foundation for the Performing Arts
( Pages for Responsible Adults )

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Elinor Donahue and Margaret O'Brien in The Unfinished Dance 1947
 

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What would people have
thought if they'd known that  Father didn't always know best? That Robert Young was a tortured alcoholic prone to paralyzing depressions and volcanic fits of temper? That he was often infuriated by Billy Gray's sullen behavior and the constant on-the-set disruptions caused by Elinor ("Princess") Donahue's stage mother? That it was Jane Wyatt, with her constant peacemaking, who really knew best?
 
 

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DREAM WIFE (M-G-M) 1953
After making this dreary comody, Grant retired from film-making. Here he played an American businessman who became interested in an Wastern princess, Betta St. John, who believed in satisfying the every whim of her man, but found there was more to be said for the American career girl, Deborah Kerr, who is chaperoning the princess on her American goodwill tour. 

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BALLERINA SUES 20th
FOR 'KING & I' SLIGHT
 
Ballerina Gemze De Lappe filed suit in New York Supreme Court last week against 20th-Fox, Darryl F. Zanuck, Charles Brackett, and the Roxy Theatre charging that she did not receive proper credit in "The King and I."
Through her attorney, Barry S. Cohen, the dancer alleges that the producers "negligently, willfully and maliciously" refrained from giving her "the proper and appropriate credit due her by virtue of her having created and performed the role of King Simon of Legree" in "The King and I." Instead Miss De Lappe claims, they credited the role to a dancer who did not perform it. In the picture, the ballerina recreated the role she originated in the Broadway production.
 
from VARIETY page 2
Wednesday, December 5th, 1956
 
 

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 UPDATED   Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

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Deborah Kerr
BY
Robert Mitchum
 
In September of 1956, I arrived in Tobago, an island in the Southern Caribbean, to begin filming Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison, directed by John Huston. Upon meeting Miss Kerr, I was impressed by her chaste and genteel demeanor, an attitude eminently suited to the saintly character she portrayed. made touchingly mortal by a few freckles.
The ensuing period of our association revealed many more delightful aspects of this splendid lady, and began the rapid development of an admiration and friendship for her that I shall treasure always.
She is warmly human and sympathetic, and possessed of a humor that ranged from the subtle to the downright wicked.
When some Hollywood organization, charged with monitoring morality, became belatedly alarmed at the perils of pairing a nun and a marine on a desert island and sent a representative to check on our image of propriety, Mr. Huston planned a little surprise.
We contrived a scene wherein Sister Angela overcomes the suppression of her base animal urges and, panting and clutching, throws herself on Mr. Allison in a lustful frenzy. With no film in the camera, we "shot" the scene for our guest, who stood agape and immobilized in shock as John quietly said, "Cut."
Huston then turned to the stunned Mr. Grizzard and said, "You should have seen it before we cleaned it up."
There was a small Catholic church on the island and the Sisters attached to it were invited to see the rushes when they were shown. Deborah, always mindful of their presence, strived to maintain an on-camera deportment that would earn their approval. However, in one scene, in which she was paddling the rubber raft, her composure cracked.
Using a palm frond as a paddle, she was stroking away furiously, with Mr. Huston's voice from the camera boat urging her on to even greater effort. "Even harder, honey," he was saying, "Paddle even harder." With one desperate surge of energy, the paddle snapped in two. Holding up her bloodied hands, she looked straight into the camera and said, "That'll show you how effing hard I'm paddling, John!"
 
 
 
 

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The Deborah Kerr Curtain Call Playhouse
A Fellowship League Foundation
For the Performing Arts
 
Her Legend Her Life and Motion Picture Career
of the Woman all Women want to be - the charming
Deborah Kerr

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To Your Health!
 
Never Underestimate
Your Need for Water
 
The Forgotten Nutrient
 
Water is so abundant, available and inexpensive yet it's often taken for granted. It is the forgotten nutrient although it ranks in importance right up there along with vitamins, minerals, protein, carbohydrate and fat. Just by living, breathing, perspiring and going to the bathroom you can lose between two and three quarts of water daily, which need to be repaced. Each day drink six to eight glasses of fluids like tap or bottled water, milk and juice.
Also eat foods with a high water content, such as fruits and vegetables. Fluid intake is especially important for older adults - you better listen to me. If you lose too much water without replacing it, you can become dehydrated.
You might faint or feel dizzy.
 
Here are some ways water works in your body:
 
* Carries nutrients to cells and carries waste products away. Water is the body's transportation system.
 
* Surrounds and protects joint and organs such as kidneys from shock or injury.
 
* Keeps the digestive tract working and the urine clear.
 
* Helps maintain body temperature.
 
 
Drink Before
You're Thirsty!
 
 
 
 
  
 

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