Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Spring Byington. Actress: You Can't Take It with You. The possessor of one of Hollywood's gentlest faces and warmest voices, and about as sweet as Tupelo honey both on-and-off camera, character actress Spring Byington was seldom called upon to play callous or unsympathetic (she did once play a half-crazed housekeeper in Dragonwyck (1946)). Although playing the part of Mrs. March in Little ...

  2. Spring Byington was a popular and highly skilled character actress whose career began in the silent era and who appeared in over 60 films and 19 Broadway productions during her acting career. She became a movie actress relatively late at the age of forty-four but even when she was younger she specialised in portraying middle-aged mothers, and small town gossipy women.

  3. Spring Byington. Actress: You Can't Take It with You. The possessor of one of Hollywood's gentlest faces and warmest voices, and about as sweet as Tupelo honey both on-and-off camera, character actress Spring Byington was seldom called upon to play callous or unsympathetic (she did once play a half-crazed housekeeper in Dragonwyck (1946)).

  4. Spring Byington. Highest Rated: 100% Devil's Doorway (1950) Lowest Rated: 57% Please Don't Eat the Daisies (1960) Birthday: Oct 17, 1886. Birthplace: Hollywood, California, USA. For over 30 years ...

  5. A Family Affair is a 1937 American comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. It was the first of 16 movies now known as the Andy Hardy series, though Andy Hardy, played by Mickey Rooney, did not become the main character in the series until a few more installments had been made. The movie features Lionel Barrymore as Judge Hardy and Spring ...

  6. 16 de out. de 2021 · Here are 10 things you should know about Spring Byington, born on October 17, 1886. Few, if any, actresses in Hollywood history have played more mother role...

    • 2 min
    • 4,8K
    • Cladrite Radio
  7. Spring Byington was born in Colorado Springs in 1893 and at the age of 14 she got her start in acting at the Elitch Theatre. She later returned with touring companies in 1914 and 1915. In 1934, Byington opened on Broadway in No Questions Asked. She is also known for her more than 100 film roles, including classics such as Little Women (1933 ...