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  1. 10 de jun. de 2023 · 46. She Kept A Dark Secret. For most of her life, Joan Blondell kept a horrifying secret. Back in 1927, she lived through a real-life nightmare but was too frightened to tell anyone. While locking up the library she worked at, a police officer approached her—and did the unthinkable.

  2. 5 de sept. de 2020 · Classic Hollywood’s consummate scene-stealing sidekick, Joan Blondell enjoyed a successful screen career for nearly five decades, but it was during the anyth...

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  3. 8 de ene. de 2021 · Blondell and Dick Powell also had a daughter together, Ellen, who in adulthood became a movie and TV hairstylist. Joan Blondell Was “Warners Workhorse” During the 1930s, Joan Blondell referred to herself as the “Warners Workhorse,” since the studio cast her in about 50 films during the decade, including 10 in 1932 alone.

  4. Joan Blondell was a beautiful and talented actress whose career spanned over forty years She was born Rose Joan Blondell on August 30, 1906, in New York City. Her parents were vaudeville entertainers and she began performing with them when she was just a toddler. Their troupe was known as the Bouncing Blondells.

  5. A beautiful and accomplished stage and screen actress, Joan Blondell was known for playing character roles as a wisecracking, working-class girl. Blondell toured all over the world, performed on Broadway, and eventually ended up in Hollywood doing movie and television work. In 1972 she wrote a novel, Center Door Fancy, based on her own life and career.

  6. 26 de dic. de 1979 · SANTA MONICA, Calif., Dec. 25 (AP) —Joan Blondell, the movie and television actress, died of leukemia today. She was 70 years old and had been hospitalized for several weeks. At her bedside were ...

  7. Joan Blondell. Those who have heard the name will most likely picture either a blowsy, older woman playing the worldwise but warm-hearted saloon owner in the late 1960s television series Here Come the Brides, or a lively, fast-talking, no-nonsense, and unconventionally sexy gold digger in numerous Pre-Code Warner Bros. comedies and musicals of the early 1930s.