Word: tallulah
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...long run, this name dropping convention is frustrating because overall only about one of every three references are immediately identifiable by a modern audience. Here are just a few from one page: Stephen Boyd, Hope Lange, Suzy Parker, Natalie Wood, Frank Powell, D.W. Griffith, Joan Leslie, Tallulah Bankhead, H.B. Warner, Max Steiner, and Louise Brooks...
What would you consider the most famous example in literature? Well, probably in both Ulysses and Lady Chatterley's Lover. Norman Mailer using fug in The Naked and the Dead, which gave rise to the famous anecdote that at a party, Tallulah Bankhead - or in some versions, Dorothy Parker - came up to him and said, "So you're the young man who can't spell...
...that he remained close to Weinberger after their undergraduate years, as both pursued careers in public service.While working for The Crimson, Weinberger became well known for his conservative editorials criticizing President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Class of 1904. He was also reportedly proud of securing a backstage interview with actress Tallulah Bankhead.Graduating magna cum laude from the College in 1938 as a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Weinberger went on to earn a JD from Harvard Law School in 1941. In the six-and-a-half decades after he left Cambridge, Weinberger’s Harvard ties continued to run deep...
...became the talkies, Kirkland was among the hundreds of stage actors lured west. He had a contract at Fox (?The Devil?s Lottery,? ?Charlie Chan?s Chance? and the first talkie version of ?Black Beauty?), but his two notable films were made at Paramount - where he co-starred with Tallulah Bankhead in George Cukor?s first solo directorial feature, ?Tarnished Lady? - and MGM, where he got third billing (above Robert Young, Maureen O?Sullivan and other stars-to-be) playing the calf-like husband who can?t keep Norma Shearer from Clark Gable in the adaptation of O?Neill...
...Porsche they are in and disappears. Clementine, taken to the hospital, finds herself the celebrity now, as the last person to have seen the missing star alive. As she slips into a life where privacy is obsolete, she starts to be visited by actresses from the past--Dorothy Lamour, Tallulah Bankhead, Marion Davies--who seem as real to her as the Virgin Mary might to other kinds of believers. We have entered the shivery realm of celebrity magic realism...