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Judy Lewis (born Judith Young; November 6, 1935 – November 25, 2011) was an American actress, writer, producer, and therapist. She was the secret biological daughter of actors Loretta Young and Clark Gable .
This film paired Gable and Young for the first time since Call of the Wild (1935), when their tryst produced a secret daughter, Judy Lewis. During filming of Key to the City, or after its completion (circa 1949-50), Gable visited the Young household and spoke with Judy Lewis for the only time in Lewis' life. Lewis was fifteen at the time and ...
Judy Lewis bore a strong resemblance to Gable, [20] and her true parentage was widely rumored in entertainment circles. When Lewis was 31 years old, she confronted her mother about her parentage; [19] Young privately admitted that she was Lewis's birth mother, stating that Lewis was "a walking mortal sin."
Judy Lewis died of cancer at age 76 on November 25, 2011. [141] In 2015, Young's daughter-in-law alleged that Young had said in 1998 that Judy Lewis was conceived by date rape. Young had previously admitted to an affair with Gable, which was a known secret in Hollywood at the time.
The brothers were the nephews of actors Polly Ann Young, Sally Blane, and Ricardo Montalban (husband of Loretta Young's half-sister, Georgiana Young), and were the half-brothers of Judy Lewis (d. 2011), their mother's child by Clark Gable. Musician David Lindley was a cousin. [4] As a youth, Lewis attended military school.
Christopher Lewis was the elder son of Hollywood actress Loretta Young and Hollywood producer Tom Lewis. His younger brother is Peter Lewis, one of the founding members of the seminal 1960s rock band Moby Grape. Christopher and Peter Lewis were the half-brothers of actress Judy Lewis (1935–2011), daughter of Loretta Young and Clark Gable.
Shawntae “Da Brat” Harris-Dupart,Jesseca “Judy” Dupart and True Legend. Courtesy of WE tv Da Brat and wife Jesseca “Judy” Harris-Dupart are set to return to the small screen for a five ...
These Old Broads is a 2001 American made-for-television comedy film directed by Matthew Diamond, written by Carrie Fisher and Elaine Pope, and starring Fisher's mother Debbie Reynolds, as well as Shirley MacLaine, Joan Collins, and Elizabeth Taylor in her final film role.