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Katharine Hepburn was nothing if not passionate, and one of her fiercest attachments was to Fenwick, her estate on the water in Old Saybrook, Conn. From 1939, when the Hepburn family built it, to ...
Tea at Five offers an intimate look at Katharine Hepburn in her home at the Fenwick estate in Old Saybrook, Connecticut. The first act takes place in September 1938. Despite her Broadway appearances and her first Oscar, Hepburn has just been labeled "box office poison" after a series of film flops. With her professional future in doubt, she ...
Fenwick is a borough in Middlesex County, Connecticut, United States, in the town of Old Saybrook. The borough is part of the Lower Connecticut River Valley Planning Region . The population was 53 at the 2020 census , [ 2 ] making it the least populous borough in Connecticut.
The Katharine Hepburn Cultural Arts Center in 2011 The town has committed spending almost $2 million on the renovation, and at least $810,000 were to be contributed by the state. A committee was attempting to raise another $2.5 million, partly for the renovation and to add two wings, but also for an endowment.
A Manhattan townhouse that the iconic actress Katharine Hepburn called home for decades has hit the market. Located within Turtle Bay Gardens, the 164-year-old property was owned by the late ...
See Inside Katharine Hepburn's Former Manhattan Townhouse—On Sale for $7.2 Million. Meghan Shouse. June 4, 2024 at 2:11 PM. ... Follow House Beautiful on Instagram and TikTok.
Katharine Martha Houghton Hepburn (February 2, 1878 – March 17, 1951) was an American feminist social reformer and a leader of the suffrage movement in the United States. Hepburn served as president of the Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association before joining the National Woman's Party . [ 1 ]
Katharine Houghton Hepburn (1907–2003), four-time Academy Award-winning actress, and named the greatest female star of classic Hollywood cinema by the American Film Institute. Margaret Perry (1920–2006), librarian [1] Amo Houghton (1926–2020), former CEO of Corning Glass and former U.S. Representative from New York (1987–2005)