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Fitzgerald's wife at the time, Sally Fitzgerald, compiled O'Connor's essays and letters after O'Connor's death. Benedict Fitzgerald (who co-wrote the screenplay for The Passion of the Christ with Mel Gibson), Barnaby Fitzgerald, and Michael Fitzgerald are sons of Robert and Sally. [5] Fitzgerald was married three times.
Robert Fitzgerald (1910–1985), poet, critic and translator; he and his wife Sally called Ridgefield home and many sources repeat the assertion, though their residence was located in neighboring Redding [4] Tom Gilroy, screenwriter, actor and film producer, graduated from Ridgefield High School in 1978; Max Gunther (1926–1998), journalist ...
Throughout her life, O'Connor maintained a wide correspondence [31] with writers that included Robert Lowell and Elizabeth Bishop, [32] English professor Samuel Ashley Brown, [32] and playwright Maryat Lee. [33] After her death, a selection of her letters, edited by her friend, Sally Fitzgerald, was published as The Habit of Being.
Benedict Fitzgerald, co-screenwriter of “The Passion of the Christ,” died Jan. 17 in Marsala, Sicily, after a long illness, his cousin Nancy Ritter told Variety. He was 74. Fitzgerald co-wrote ...
Because some famous people have been widely thought to have lived in Ridgefield. In a book of short stories by Flannery O'Connor, for instance, Sally Fitzgerald states in the introduction that O'Connor rented a room above the garage from, Sally and her husband, Robert Fitzgerald. The introduction further states that the Fitzgerald's lived in ...
Diane Marie Antonia Varsi (February 23, 1938 – November 19, 1992) was an American film actress [2] best known for her performances in Peyton Place – her film debut, for which she was nominated for an Academy Award – and the cult film Wild in the Streets.
Burt Reynolds and Sally Field. Bettmann/Getty Images Sally Field revealed that when she won an Oscar for best actress in 1980, her then-boyfriend, Burt Reynolds, refused to attend the ceremony ...
Bridget Loves Bernie is an American sitcom that aired on CBS from September 16, 1972, to March 3, 1973. The series, created by Bernard Slade, depicted an interfaith marriage between a Catholic woman and a Jewish man.