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  1. 8 de may. de 2024 · Ida Lupino (born February 4, 1918, London, England—died August 3, 1995, Burbank, California, U.S.) was an English-born American film and television actress, director, and screenwriter who first gained fame through her portrayals of strong, worldly-wise characters and went on to become one of the first women to direct films in Hollywood. (Read ...

  2. Ida Lupino falleció el 3 de agosto de 1995 en Los Angeles, California, víctima de un derrame cerebral. Filmografía 1982 Deadhead Miles 1978 My Boys Are Good Boys 1976 The Food of the Gods 1975 The Devil's Rain 1969 Backtrack 1966 The Trouble with Angels /Directora 1956 While the City Sleeps 1956 Strange Intruder 1955 The Big Knife

  3. 2 de feb. de 2018 · There was no place for women directors in 1940s and 50s Hollywood, but that didn’t stop Ida Lupino. Long before John Cassavetes, Lupino – born in London 100 years ago – blazed a trail for fearless, independent filmmakers. Born in Herne Hill, London, 100 years ago, Ida Lupino was virtually predestined to answer the calling of stage and screen.

  4. Ida Lupino (1918 - 1995) fue una actriz y directora de Reino Unido conocida por: El último refugio, Embrujada (Serie de TV), Mientras Nueva York duerme, La casa en la sombra, El rey del rodeo, El autoestopista, La pasión ciega, El bígamo, El lobo de mar y Sueño de amor eterno

  5. 14 de abr. de 2009 · Ida Lupino and Collier Young were married in 1948, and, shortly thereafter, Lupino, Young and Anson Bond (owner of Bond’s Clothing) formed Emerald Productions. Shortly thereafter, Bond decided that film production was too risky and his share of the partnership was bought out by screenwriter Malvin Wald.

  6. Budgeted at just over $150,000, the film grossed over a million.Retooling Emerald Pictures as The Filmmakers, Lupino and Young got back to business with "Never Fear" (1949), a drama concerned with a young dancer ankled by. Their next film, "Outrage" (1950), about the aftermath of a rape, was distributed by RKO Radio Pictures.

  7. In a heartfelt 1995 New York Times tribute to Ida Lupino (1918–95), Martin Scorsese called her “a woman of extraordinary talents, and one of those talents was directing. Her tough, glowingly emotional work as an actress is well remembered, but her considerable accomplishments as a filmmaker are largely forgotten and they shouldn’t be.