Word: husbanding
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...drawn-out royal confinement for her, thank you. Right up to the eighth month of her pregnancy, Greece's Danish-born Queen Anne-Marie, 18, has been dashing about Athens with her husband King Constantine, 25, visiting galleries, strolling hand-in-hand through the park, dining in public restaurants and attending scores of gala functions. At last the world's youngest and loveliest queen sailed with Queen Mother Frederika for Corfu. There, in Mon Repos, the royal family's summer palace by the sea, she will await the birth of her first child, expected some null...
...also said yes to Playboy is no deep mystery. Though she says, "It's often sexier to keep your clothes on," and in fact refused to play a nude scene before the cameras, she cheerfully went along when United Artists paid her photographer husband, John Derek, half of his $15,000 fee to promote her next film, She. "Sex within bounds is part of show business," says Playboy's Hugh Hefner. "All that's happened is that nudity is now accepted as a legitimate expression of sex appeal...
...lairdly wenchers as an ambitious servant girl could wish. In the country, after her master's elder son (Daniel Massey) has blithely ruined her, she marries his foolish brother and is promptly widowed. En route to London, she outwits a dashing highwayman (Richard Johnson) and meets her husband-to-be, George Sanders, who steals the show as a passionate Puritan debilitated by the labors of love. The comedy reaches a peak of unbuttoned ribaldry in a shipboard rendezvous between Moll and her beloved highwayman, interrupted abed by the bandit's aide-de-camp (Leo McKern), who keeps tumbling...
...used her ill-gotten lovers for gain. Novak's Moll uses her ill-gotten gains for her lover, and too soon comes to too good an end as a conventional romantic heroine. Appropriately, in Moll's real-life postscript, Actress Novak and Leading Man Johnson became husband and wife, which makes their wide-screen hanky-panky seem unimpeachably legitimate...
...months?" inquires her diplomat husband (Richard Todd). Just back from a trip, Todd finds everything at sixes and sevens in his English country home. His wife-pointedly identified as the mother of his children, lest there be some mistake-has been participating in the local arts festival rather more enthusiastically than anyone planned. Her pet project is a famous Italian composer-pianist (Rossano Brazzi). The two look at one another, and the sound track booms concerti. On a chain around her neck Maureen wears the gold medal Brazzi won at the festival, a clue that her course in music appreciation...