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Debbie Reynolds pictured on the cover of Photoplay, March 1954.Accessed via the Media History Digital Library. The Media History Digital Library (MHDL) is a non-profit, open access digital archive founded by David Pierce [1] and directed by Eric Hoyt that compiles books, magazines, and other print materials related to the histories of film, broadcasting, and recorded sound and makes these ...
Cosmopolitan (stylized in all caps) is an American quarterly fashion and entertainment magazine for women, first published based in New York City in March 1886 as a family magazine; it was later transformed into a literary magazine and, since 1965, has become a women's magazine. Cosmopolitan is one of the best-selling magazines. [3] [4]
Highest-grossing films of 1989 Rank Title Distributor Domestic gross 1 Batman: Warner Bros. $251,188,924 2 Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: Paramount: $197,171,806 3 Lethal Weapon 2: Warner Bros. $147,253,986 4 Look Who's Talking: TriStar: $140,088,813 5 Honey, I Shrunk the Kids: Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures: $130,724,172 6 Back to ...
Cosmopolitan's first successful film was Humoresque (1920), which also was the first film to receive the Photoplay Medal of Honor. [ 3 ] For its studio complex, Hearst acquired Sulzer's [ 4 ] Harlem River Park and Casino [ 5 ] [ 6 ] at 126th Street and Second Avenue [ 7 ] but a fire [ 8 ] on February 18, 1923, destroyed the complex [ 9 ] while ...
In 1965, Brown became editor-in-chief of Cosmopolitan, then a literary magazine famed for high-toned content, and reinvented it as a magazine for the modern single career-woman. [19] In the 1960s, Brown was an outspoken advocate of women's sexual freedom and sought to provide women with role models in her magazine. She claimed that women could ...
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Cannibal Women in the Avocado Jungle of Death is a 1989 American comedy film directed by J. F. Lawton and starring Shannon Tweed and Bill Maher.The film sends up many pop culture motifs and societal trends, including feminism (and feminist movements' fragmentation around various issues), B movies (particularly Cannibal Holocaust), celebrities, major writers and political figures, centered ...
Greene's "Happy Dan, the Cynical Dog" (Cosmopolitan magazine, 1945) [7] was the basis for Walt Disney's animated film Lady and the Tramp (1955). [8] King Features immediately spun off "Scamp," a minor unnamed character from the movie, into his own comic strip, written by Greene and illustrated by Dick Moores.