20th Century Fox
North side of the 6500 block of Hollywood Boulevard
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Betty Grable
Born Ruth Elizabeth Grable on
Dec. 18, 1916
in St. Louis, MO
Died
July 2, 1973
of lung cancer in St. John's Hospital, CA
Betty Grable was famed
more for her shapely legs than for her acting and singing, as the star
of dozens of Hollywood musicals was always ready to concede.
During World War II, GI locker doors and warship bulkheads from North Africa to Saipan were adorned with that familiar bathing suit photo in which she posed with hands on hips and an over-the-shoulder smile. Though she was just 23 when she made 1940's "Down Argentine Way" — one of her best-known Technicolor films — Grable had been knocking around Hollywood for a decade, appearing in the chorus and in small roles in such films as 1930's "Whoopee!" and 1934's "The Gay Divorcee." Alice Faye, Fox's reigning musical queen, was set to do "Down Argentine Way" but pulled out, citing exhaustion, and studio head Darryl Zanuck replaced Faye with Grable. In 1943 — the year she married bandleader Harry James, whom she divorced 22 years later — Grable became the top moneymaking film star. Several times in the 1940s she was listed by the U.S. Treasury as the best-paid woman in America. It was estimated that she earned more than $3 million during her career. Grable got her first job in a Busby Berkeley chorus line in Eddie Cantor's "Whoopee." Her 42 films included "Follow the Fleet," "Million Dollar Legs," "Moon Over Miami," "Footlight Serenade" and "How to Marry a Millionaire." More than once she turned down dramatic roles, explaining she had "no desire to become Sarah Bernhardt."
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Putting my experiences of Life In NYC in a more personal perspective, and checking in with international/national, tech and some other news
Translation from English
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Remembring 1940'[s Star Betty Grable
Most people today have no idea who Betty Grable was, but believe me she was hot stuff in her day
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