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  1. Hace 4 días · En el Hollywood de los años cuarenta y cincuenta había mujeres malas, muy malas y malísimas. La peor de todas, dicen muchos que vivieron en esa época, era una periodista de nombre Hedda Hopper, actriz fracasada. Todos en el ambiente del cine le temían, y la cortejaban para salvarse de su malvada chismograf­ía.

  2. Hace 1 día · Bob's guest is gossip columnist Hedda Hopper, who participates in a sketch about advice to the lovelorn.www.otrcomedy.com

  3. Hace 3 días · He is married to Hedda Hopper in the 1930 version, which doesn’t feel right, but in the 1938 version he is wed to Jean Dixon’s Susan, who also works as a lecturer, and this feels like a precious glimpse of what looks like a bohemian marriage of equals where sexuality might be allowed to bend on both sides.

  4. Hace 5 días · Dalton Trumbo discovers a backdoor to Hollywood screenwriting work. Families of Hollywood workers reckon with the fallout in generations to come. After decades away, Charlie Chaplin makes a triumphant return to America. Ellen Geer recalls the effects of the blacklist on her father Will Geer, who refused to expose his friends.

  5. Hace 4 días · Tendría yo seis o siete años cuando vi en el Cinema Palacio la película “National Velvet” (en español “Fuego de juventud”) con Elizabeth Taylor, Mickey Rooney y ese gran actor de carácter, Donald Crisp. No mucho mayor que yo era Liz en ese tiempo: contaba 12 años. Selección de los editores.

  6. Hace 5 días · The novel is a tragicomic tightrope act, a fantastical oral history told from the perspectives of an array of players in and out of the Casablanca saga, among them a young German-Jewish ingenue who never got her star turn, gossip queen Hedda Hopper, Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels, and Jack Warner himself, who might be seen as the accidental h...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Bette_DavisBette Davis - Wikipedia

    Hace 9 horas · Hedda Hopper wrote: "If Bette had deliberately set out to wreck her career, she could not have picked a more appropriate vehicle." The film contained the line "What a dump!", which became closely associated with Davis after it was referenced in Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, and impersonators began to use it in their acts.