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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Libby_HolmanLibby Holman - Wikipedia

    Libby Holman. Elizabeth Lloyd Holman (née Holzman; May 23, 1904 – June 18, 1971) was an American socialite, actress, singer, and activist. Early life. Elizabeth Lloyd Holzman was born May 23, 1904, in Cincinnati, Ohio, the daughter of a lawyer and stockbroker Alfred Holzman and his wife Rachel Florence Workum Holzman.

  2. Libby Holman (Cincinnati, Ohio; 23 de mayo de 1904 – Stamford, Connecticut; 18 de junio de 1971) fue una cantante de blues y actriz de cine y teatro estadounidense. [1]

  3. Forget The Great Gatsby, Libby Holman was the perfect symbol of 1920s debauchery and decadence. America became obsessed with the sultry performer for her crazy personal life. With countless scandals, affairs, and tragedies, no one could blame them. This is the wild life of a gold-digger who discovered — too late — that all that glitters is ...

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  4. 23 de jun. de 2021 · Singer and actress Libby Holman was known as much for her scandalous personal life and revolutionary activism as for her lush voice. She grew famous performing in Broadway shows and revues throughout the 1920s. Holman was openly bisexual and was accused of murdering her husband, Zachary Smith Reynolds, in 1932.

  5. On Friday, June 18, 1971, at Treetops, in the front seat of her RollsRoyce, Libby Holman committed suicide, dying from carbon monoxide poisoning. She was sixty-seven. Her estate was valued at $13,200,000, the bulk of which was donated to the Christopher Reynolds Foundation.

  6. www.imdb.com › name › nm2071916Libby Holman - IMDb

    Libby Holman. Actress: Dreams That Money Can Buy. Libby Holman's life was one of early poverty, extraordinary talent, scandal, fabulous wealth and tragedy. She's the stuff books and movies are ripe for.

  7. 30 de mar. de 2020 · Dee - Oct 7, 2013. When they found singer Libby Holman dead in her Rolls Royce of carbon monoxide poisoning in 1971, her suicide brought an end to a life marked by scandal, sexual promiscuity, one dead husband and a murder trial, overt bisexuality, the death of a son, depression . . . and some pretty steamy blues songs, although ...