Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Joseph Cheshire Cotten Jr. (May 15, 1905 – February 6, 1994) was an American film, stage, radio and television actor. Cotten achieved prominence on Broadway , starring in the original stage productions of The Philadelphia Story (1939) and Sabrina Fair (1953).
Medina married Joseph Cotten on 20 October 1960, in Beverly Hills at the home of David O. Selznick and Jennifer Jones. [4] Cotten and she bought a historic 1935 home in the Mesa neighborhood of Palm Springs, California, where they lived from 1985 to 1992. [5] No children were born from either marriage. [citation needed]
Cotten in 1943. Joseph Cotten was an American actor known for his roles on stage and screen. Cotten's most notable projects include his collaborations with Orson Welles.He portrayed Jed Leland in Citizen Kane (1941), Eugene Morgan in The Magnificent Ambersons (1942), and Howard Graham in Journey into Fear (1943).
Co-star Joseph Cotten would later speak highly of Durbin's integrity and character. [17] Durbin had an iron will, and was influential in executive decisions at Universal, being one of the company's major stockholders. Columnist Jack Lait reported that "Durbin has been hard to deal with since she married.
Other actors she befriended during her career were Joseph Cotten, David Niven, Ray Milland, Marie McDonald, and especially Jeanne Crain. [9] In 1954, Peters married Texas oilman Stuart Cramer (grandson of Stuart W. Cramer). [39] At the time they married, they had known each other for only a few weeks, and they separated a few months later. [34]
Social outcasts Mary Marshall (Ginger Rogers) and Sgt. Zachary Morgan (Joseph Cotten) meet while seated across from each other on a train bound for Pinehill.Zach, a victim of PTSD, then termed shell shock, has just been granted a ten-day leave from a military hospital to try to readjust to daily life.
Joseph Cotten as Samson "Sam" Flusky, successful businessman and Henrietta's husband; Michael Wilding as Hon. Charles Adare, second cousin of the governor; Margaret Leighton as Milly, Flusky's scheming housekeeper; Cecil Parker as the new Governor of New South Wales, Sir Richard; Denis O'Dea as Mr. Corrigan, Attorney General
The Man with a Cloak is a 1951 American film noir crime-thriller-drama directed by Fletcher Markle and starring Joseph Cotten, Barbara Stanwyck, Louis Calhern, and Leslie Caron, and based on "The Gentleman from Paris", a short story by John Dickson Carr.