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  1. Anita Loos (1920) Anita Loos (born April 26, 1889 – August 18, 1981) was an American screenwriter, stage actress and author. She wrote several novels. She was best known for her book Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. She also wrote its sequel But Gentlemen Marry Brunettes. She was a screenwriter of many movies .

  2. Anita Loos was an American screenwriter, playwright, and author. She was born on April 26, 1888 in Etna, Siskiyou County, California. She was the daughter of a stage actress and a mining engineer. She began writing stories at the age of six and had her first story published at the age of fifteen. Loos wrote for silent films, including the 1915 ...

  3. Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. Anita Loos. 4.5 star. 160. Switch to the audiobook. Loos’s classic tale shows that questions of women and power—more relevant today than ever—can come in the most alluring of packages. 4.5. Born in California, Anita Loos (1893–1981) was herself a celebrity of the Jazz Age that produced Lorelei Lee.

  4. Chemistry. Anita Loos, Ray Pierre Corsini (1985). “Fate keeps on happening: adventures of Lorelei Lee and other writings”. 21 Copy quote. A kiss on the hand may feel very, very good, but a diamond and sapphire bracelet lasts forever. Anita Loos. Kissing, Hands, Forever. 149 Copy quote.

  5. A hit of 1947 Broadway season, Happy Birthday was produced starring Helen Hayes in a Tony Award-winning performance. Anita Loos, fondly remembered for her classic of the flapper-era, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, has fashioned this comedic fantasy of the meek librarian who has a night on the town. Shy and inhibited Addie Bemis works in a Newark ...

  6. As Anita grew into old age and Mr. E. became increasingly mentally ill, Loos began to rely on her paid companion and housekeeper Gladys. Under Gladys' influence, Anita began to become more ...

  7. 17. Aug. 1998 · Born in California, Anita Loos (1893–1981) was herself a celebrity of the Jazz Age that produced Lorelei Lee. She began writing movie scripts by the time she was twelve, and before her death in 1981 she had written an enormous number of stories, screenplays, and more. She was also the author of an autobiography, A Girl Like I.