Gloria Swanson in Madame Sans-Gene

Gloria Swanson in Madame Sans-Gene

Author: Robert M. Fells

Publisher: Lulu.com

Published: 2018-10-15

Total Pages: 61

ISBN-13: 0359155596

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Napoleon wasn't always an Emperor or even a General. In 1792 he was a lowly Corporal who couldn't even pay his laundry bill. But the laundress they nicknamed "Madame Sans-Gene" took pity on him and washed his clothing for free. The Revolution dramatically changed their lives and Years later when he had forgotten her they would meet again. By then she was a Duchess and she alone could stop Napoleon from condemning an innocent man to death. But would he listen to her?


Monthly Bulletin

Monthly Bulletin

Author: St. Louis Public Library

Publisher:

Published: 1913

Total Pages: 680

ISBN-13:

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"Teachers' bulletin", vol. 4- issued as part of v. 23, no. 9-


Gloria Swanson

Gloria Swanson

Author: Stephen Michael Shearer

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

Published: 2024-11-19

Total Pages: 493

ISBN-13: 1493077058

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Gloria Swanson is most remembered today for her role as “Norma Desmond” in Billy Wilder’s noir sound classic Sunset Boulevard (1950), but Swanson during her heyday was heralded as filmdom’s leading fashion queen, as proclaimed by director Cecil B. DeMille in such silent motion pictures as Male and Female (1919), Why Change Your Husband (1921), and The Affairs of Anatol (1922). Throughout that decade and well into the 1930s, Swanson set fashion standards on and off the screen in creations designed by such illustrious couturieres as Mitchell Leisen, Paul Iribe, Norman Norell, Sonia Delaunay, Max Ree, Capt. Edward H. Molyneux, Coco Chanel, Rene Hubert, and later Edith Head. In the 1950s, she designed and managed her own line of ready to wear fashion patterns called Forever Young for women of a discernible age. Gloria Swanson: Hollywood’s First Glamour Queen is a photographic tribute to this extraordinary woman. Focusing on sense of style and fashion, the book contains hundreds of personal and professional photographs, many never before published, and running biographical commentary by biographer Stephen Michael Shearer, author of the definitive book of the star, Gloria Swanson: The Ultimate Star (St. Martin’s Press-Macmillan).


Gloria Swanson

Gloria Swanson

Author: Tricia Welsch

Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi

Published: 2013-08-21

Total Pages: 522

ISBN-13: 1628468904

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Gloria Swanson: Ready for Her Close-Up shows how a talented, self-confident actress negotiated a creative path through seven decades of celebrity. It also illuminates a little-known chapter in American media history: how the powerful women of early Hollywood transformed their remarkable careers after their stars dimmed. This book brings Swanson (1899–1983) back into the spotlight, revealing her as a complex, creative, entrepreneurial, and thoroughly modern woman. Swanson cavorted in slapstick short films with Charlie Chaplin and Mack Sennett in the 1910s. The popularity of her films with Cecil B. DeMille helped create the star system. A glamour icon, Swanson became the most talked-about star in Hollywood, earning three Academy Award nominations, receiving 10,000 fan letters every week, and living up to a reputation as Queen of Hollywood. She bought mansions and penthouses, dressed in fur and feathers, and flitted through Paris, London, and New York engaging in passionate love affairs that made headlines and caused scandals. Frustrated with the studio system, Swanson turned down a million-dollar-a-year contract. After a wild ride making unforgettable movies with some of Hollywood’s most colorful characters—including her lover Joseph Kennedy and maverick director Erich von Stroheim—she was a million dollars in debt. Without hesitation she went looking for her next challenge, beginning her long second act. Swanson became a talented businesswoman who patented inventions and won fashion awards for her clothing designs; a natural foods activist decades before it was fashionable; an exhibited sculptor; and a designer employed by the United Nations. All the while she continued to act in films, theater, and television at home and abroad. Though she had one of Hollywood’s most famous exit lines—"All right, Mr. DeMille, I’m ready for my close-up!”—the real Gloria Swanson never looked back.