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  1. The play and Alla’s performance came to the attention of motion picture producer Lewis J. Selznick (who was also from Ukraine and whose second son, David O. Selznick, later became a notable Hollywood filmmaker, producing the film version of Gone With the Wind as well as Nazimova’s final film, Since You Went Away, in 1944.)

  2. Alla Nazimova. Alla Nazimova, pseudonimo di Marem-Ides Adelaida Jacovlevna Leventon (Марем-Идес Аделаида Яковлевна Левентон) ( Jalta, 22 maggio 1879 – Los Angeles, 13 luglio 1945 ), è stata un' attrice russa naturalizzata statunitense. Nata da una famiglia ebraica ucraina, negli anni dieci e venti fu una ...

  3. 'Alla Nazimova (born Miriam Edez Adelaida Leventon; May 22, 1879 – July 13, 1945) was a Russian/American theater and film actress, screenwriter, and producer. She is often known as just Nazimova, and was also known as Alia Nasimoff.[1] Nazimova was one of three children of Yakov Leventon and Sonya Horowitz. The family was Jewish and lived in Yalta, Crimea, then part of the Russian Empire ...

  4. Welcome to the Alla Nazimova Society. In the 1910s and 1920s, one of the brightest lights on America’s theatrical stage and on its cinematic screen was actor, director, writer and producer Alla Nazimova. Few women shined as brightly but now she languishes largely forgotten and neglected. We are an organization which seeks to rectify that, and ...

  5. 1 de jun. de 2023 · In celebration of LGBTQIA+ Pride Month, the AFI Catalog shines a spotlight on the trailblazing queer actress Alla Nazimova, who would have celebrated her 144th birthday this June 4. Hailed by modern scholars as “the founding mother of Sapphic Hollywood,” Nazimova was known as a brilliant artiste and non-conformist, who performed in over 20 films in her time, as well as working as a ...

  6. The film was a financial disaster and ended Nazimova's producing career. Soon she found her star fading and would go on to appear in only a few more films before returning to Broadway before the advent of talkies, where she won acclaim as Raynevskaya in "The Cherry Orchard" (1928) and originated Christine Mannon in Eugene O'Neill's "Mourning Becomes Electra" (1931).

  7. Camille. (1921 film) Camille is a 1921 American silent drama film starring Alla Nazimova as Marguerite and Rudolph Valentino as her lover, Armand. It is based on the play adaptation La Dame aux Camélias ( The Lady of the Camellias) by Alexandre Dumas, fils, which was first published in French as a novel in 1848 and as a play in 1852.