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  1. Betsy Blair (1923 - 2009) fue una actriz de Estados Unidos conocida por: Calle Mayor, Marty, El grito, Flight of the Spruce Goose, Rencontre à Paris, Odio contra odio, Noche de pesadilla, Senilidad, Juventud corrompida y Descente aux enfers

  2. En 1957 su matrimonio de quince años con Betsy Blair (Marty, Calle Mayor) había terminado debido a la necesidad de crecimiento personal de Betsy. [15] En 1960 Kelly se casó con Jeanne Coyne, quien desde hacía muchos años había sido su asistente y ayudante coreográfica y que años atrás había mantenido un breve matrimonio con su amigo Stanley Donen.

  3. 22 de mar. de 2009 · Betsy Blair on working with Orson Welles on OTHELLO. March 22, 2009. Joseph McBride has sent along this link to a delightful interview with Betsy Blair, recorded when she appeared at The London Review Bookshop in 2005 to talk about her autobiography, The Memory of All That. Ms. Blair candidly tells of how Welles called and asked her to play ...

  4. 20 de mar. de 2009 · Betsy Blair, an actress best remembered for playing the shy schoolteacher who meets Ernest Borgnine’s lonely Bronx butcher at the Stardust Ballroom in the 1955 movie “Marty,” has died.

  5. 29 de abr. de 2023 · Betsy Blair, best known for her Academy Award-nominated performance as Ernest Borgnine ’s love interest in the 1955 Oscar- and Palme d’Or -winning drama Marty, and for her marriage to Gene Kelly, died on March 13 in London. Blair, who was 85, had been a London resident for many years.

  6. 16 de nov. de 2021 · Blair amassed just over forty film and TV credits in her career, others of which include "A Delicate Balance" and "Careless", ending with a role in the 1994 TV miniseries, "Scarlett" (a sequel to "Gone with the Wind"). She remained married to Reisz for almost forty years, until his death. Betsy Blair died in 2009 at the age of 85.

  7. Betsy Blair was born in Cliffside, New Jersey, a child model before finding work as a chorus dancer at the early age of 15. She received her first mini-break on Broadway in "Panama Hattie" in 1940 delivering a single line, but by the next year she had copped the ingénue lead in William Saroyan's "The Beautiful People.