Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Maud Humphrey (March 30, 1868 – November 22, 1940) was a commercial illustrator, watercolorist, and suffragette from the United States. She was the mother of the actor Humphrey Bogart and frequently used her young son as a model.

  2. Biography. Maud Humphrey (Bogart) (1868 – 1940) was one of the most popular American commercial illustrators of the Victorian Era. Her portrayals of well-dressed, cherubic, rosy-cheeked children appeared in calendars, greeting cards, fashion magazines, and a variety of other publications.

  3. 14 de nov. de 2019 · Her famous son, Humphrey Bogart, star of more than 70 movies, was her only son. Maud gained her fame as an artist and illustrator. In her long career she produced nearly 30,000 illustrations for greeting cards, advertisements, magazine articles and juvenile literature.

  4. Fue el mayor de los tres hijos de un matrimonio formado por el cirujano Belmont DeForest Bogart (1867-1934), de orígenes angloholandeses (el apellido Bogart proviene del neerlandés Bogaert) y la artista gráfica Maud Humphrey (1868-1940), formada en París con el pintor impresionista Whistler, directora gráfica de la revista de ...

    • Humphrey DeForest Bogart
    • Bogie
  5. Maud Humphrey Bogart, made even more towering by her high-heeled shoes with the little purple bows, railed at the embarrassed little girl: Oh, she knew what Grace was up to, spreading stories about her servants being cruel. Well, she didn't believe it--not a word of it!

  6. Humphrey's charming babies promoted products like Ivory Soap and Mellin Baby Food and featured in books of poems and fairy tales. In 1898 she married Dr. Belmont Deforest Bogart, a heart and lung surgeon, and their three children included the actor Humphrey Bogart.

  7. Bogart's mother, Maud Humphrey, was descended from a judge and from a wealthy manufacturer. Her father, John Perkins Humphrey, had a prosperous shoe store on Main Street in Rochester, New York, where she was born (three years before Belmont) on March 30, 1865. As a child, she could see mules pulling the barges through the Erie Canal.