Word: gabor
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Manhattan, Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor, returning from some cinemaking (Moulin Rouge) in London and Paris, paused long enough to explain why she was rushing back to Hollywood and husband George Sanders (who claimed sourly last year that "I have been discarded like a squeezed lemon"). Said Zsa Zsa: "He's so wonderful. George does not trust me-or rather, he is jealous. This is the way husbands should be, but of course he has nothing to worry about. I love only...
...Miss Gabor happily changed the conversation to the subject of her off-again, on-again marriage to actor George Sanders. She said their recent misunderstanding had been patched with the best of marital glue." --Boston Traveler, October...
...Hollywood, French-born Cinemactress Corinne Calvert filed a $1,000,000 slander suit against Hungarian-born Cinemactress Zsa Zsa Gabor for telling a columnist that Corinne was cockney English, not French at all. From London Zsa Zsa replied: "It's much easier to get a million dollars out of a rich husband than it is out of another actress." At week's end, to the entire satisfaction of her pressagent, Corinne recalled another galling insult: "Zsa Zsa said once that I had no breasts. Well, any time she feds like making a contest...
...Gabor struck a delicately balanced pose in imitation of another famous singer and actress: Jane Avril, favorite model of French Artist Henri Toulouse-Lautrec. Then she left for Paris to play the part of the poster model in a new movie, Moulin Rouge, the life story of Lautrec...
...Glad Gladwyns (Fred Allen and Ginger Rogers), a Mr. & Mrs. breakfast team, who address each other by such endearing terms as "panther girl" and "white fang" when they are not being lovey-dovey on the air, dispensing commercials and "good, clean, nauseating fun"; a flouncy blonde (Zsa Zsa Gabor) who is trying to dig all the gold she can from her Texas-tycoon husband (Louis Calhern); a laconic Long Island couple (Paul Douglas and Eve Arden) who communicate with each other only in monosyllables; Mrs. Mississippi (Marilyn Monroe), a bathing-beauty contest winner, and her baby-tending husband (David Wayne...