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Eileen Wilson Powell (April 19, 1894 – September 12, 1942), born Julia Mary Tierney, was an American actress. Early life. Julia Mary Tierney was born in New York ...
On April 15, 1915, Powell married Eileen Wilson, who was born Julia Mary Tierney. The couple had a son, William David Powell. They divorced in 1930. Powell's son became a television writer and producer before a period of ill health and depression led to his suicide in 1968. [13] On June 26, 1931, Powell married actress Carole Lombard.
Eileen Wilson (born Eileen Eshelman; January 15, 1923 [1] – September 9, 2018) was an American big band singer, and one of the original stars of the 1950s ...
Powell was the only child of actor William Powell and actress Eileen Wilson, [1] who divorced in 1930. He graduated from Princeton, magna cum laude in English. [2]On Saturday, December 22, 1956, at age 31, Powell wed former child actress Patricia Parsons (1931-2006), exchanging their wedding vows at the home of his father, on Vereda Norte in Palm Springs, California. [2]
Lewis met actor William Powell, who was 27 years her senior, at MGM in 1939. [6] They married at a dude ranch in Nevada on January 5, 1940, [7] after a courtship of less than a month. [6] She retired from acting in 1943. Lewis became known as Mousie Powell after her marriage. [8]
The Crown is a historical drama web television series about the reign of Queen Elizabeth II, created and principally written by Peter Morgan, and produced by Left Bank Pictures and Sony Pictures Television for Netflix.
Jane Powell: Lisa Grimaldi: 1990s Jill Powell: Marcy Breen Lafferty: 1991–1994 Leona Powers: Thelma Turner: 1956–1957 Susan Pratt: Charlotte Lindsey: 1999 Simon Prebble: Martin Chedwyn: 1996 Jon Prescott: Mike Kasnoff: 2008 Rosemary Prinz: Penny Hughes: 1956–68, 1985–1988, 1993, 1998, 2000–2001 Renee Props: Ellie Snyder: 1988–1992 ...
The film The Best Things in Life Are Free , about DeSylva, Brown and Henderson, was named after the song and featured it with a version sung by Sheree North (dubbed by Eileen Wilson). In an episode of The Muppet Show , a group of kleptomaniac prairie dogs sang the song as they looted the set.