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1-6 of 6
- Producer
- Actor
Robert Waterfield was born on 26 July 1920 in Elmira, New York, USA. He was a producer and actor, known for The King and Four Queens (1956), Run for the Sun (1956) and Gentlemen Marry Brunettes (1955). He was married to Janet Ann Green and Jane Russell. He died on 25 March 1983 in Los Angeles, California, USA.- Actress
- Costume and Wardrobe Department
On stage from the age of seven, Martha Sleeper began on screen in her early teens as a comic actress for Hal Roach. After her successful debut in the independently produced farce The Mailman (1923), she found herself cast in a series of child comedies with Buddy Messinger and a brace of one- and two-reel shorts opposite Charley Chase with titles like All Wet (1924) and Crazy Like a Fox (1926). Being voted a WAMPAS Baby Star in 1927 was a further boon to her popularity. An attempt was made to turn her into an eccentric knockabout comedienne in the vein of Gale Henry, but this failed to come off. She was subsequently used in rather more subtle domestic farce, such as in Pass the Gravy (1928) , as Max Davidson's daughter, frenetically trying to communicate with him by mime. Her last role of note in silent comedy was as a rather perfunctory leading lady in Stan Laurel's last solo effort, Should Tall Men Marry? (1928).
Her contract with Roach was not renewed due to a fiscal downsizing of the company in 1928, so Martha moved over to FBO. This was a Poverty Row outfit that specialized in low-budget features--often westerns--for the Midwest market. No prints of the six films Martha made for FBO are believed to have survived. After 1930, she bounced around among the studios, appearing in supporting roles--often as the "other woman"--in melodramas for MGM, Paramount and RKO. At the same time, growing ever more restless in Hollywood, she sought work on the stage. In an interview, she asserted that she had been given "permission to take jobs in the theater in downtown Los Angeles. That's unheard of, a contract player wanting to have time for stage work" (NY Times, April 7,1983).
In 1936, Martha and her actor-husband Hardie Albright left the West Coast for New York to begin a ten-year run on- and off-Broadway. At the same time she developed a lucrative sideline of designing idiosyncratic costume jewelry, mostly made from bakelite, wood and metal. This blossomed into a respectable $300,000-a-year business and earned Martha the sobriquet of "The Gadget Girl". Her varied creations--including tarantula brooches, necklaces of sun-drenched strawberries and collars of champagne bubbles and swizzle sticks--were hugely popular with the general public, the jet set and film stars like Dolores Del Río and Fay Wray.
In 1949, Martha settled on the island of Puerto Rico, sold her possessions in New York and reinvented herself yet again, as proprietor of a boutique in San Juan, designing and manufacturing fashionable women's clothes. She remained on the island until her retirement in 1969, spending her remaining years on her second husband's plantation near Charleston in South Carolina.- Bill Severn spent his brief career at MGM as a child actor, known as Little Billy Severn. His brother Christopher was also a child actor. As an adult, he was a world-known evangelist, based in Ventura, California. His ministry took him and his family to far-flung places such as Indonesia during the 1965 revolution, Israel, the UK and also every corner of the USA by way of the Trinity Broadcasting Network. He was a devoted husband and father. He was in the midst of a busy schedule in 1983 when he died suddenly - he was exercising in his weight room when he was stricken by a massive heart attack. This was a dreadful shock because he seemed to be the in the peak of health. He was only 45 years old. He was laid to rest in Pierce Brothers-Valley Oaks Memorial Park, in Westlake Village, California, beside his mother.
- Constantine Fitzgibbon was born on 8 June 1919 in Massachusetts, USA. He was a writer, known for ITV Television Playhouse (1955), ITV Play of the Week (1955) and Bookstand (1960). He was married to Marjorie Steele. He died on 25 March 1983 in Dublin, Ireland.
- Music Department
- Composer
- Soundtrack
Jacques Debronckart was born on 13 January 1934 in Chartrettes, Seine-et-Marne, France. He was a composer, known for Au théâtre ce soir (1966), Gribouille: Dieu, Julie! (1966) and Le Troisième Oeil (1971). He died on 25 March 1983 in Paris, France.- Camera and Electrical Department
- Cinematographer
Ib Lønvang was born on 21 August 1933 in Copenhagen, Denmark. He was a cinematographer, known for Reptilicus (1961), Frøken Nitouche (1963) and Everything for the Woman (1964). He died on 25 March 1983.