Yahoo Suche Web Suche

  1. Cell Phone #, Address, Pics & More. edith evans's Info - Look Free!

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. 7. Mai 2019 · An excerpt from a 1970s interview by Russell Harty with the theatre legend.

    • 2 Min.
    • 15K
    • Many Pearls
  2. Edith Corse Evans (* 21. September 1875 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; † 15. April 1912 im Nordatlantik) war eine US-amerikanische Angehörige der New Yorker Oberschicht, ein Mitglied der Colonial Dames of America und das, was im heutigen Sprachgebrauch als „Socialite“ bezeichnet wird. Zudem war sie eine von vier Frauen der Ersten ...

  3. Dame Edith Evans died at her country home in Goud-hurst, Kent, some 40 miles southeast of London, England, on October 14, 1976, at age 88, from respiratory complications following a head cold. She had been an actress for over 60 years. Her death occurred a few weeks after that of her great contemporary, Dame Sybil Thorndike; together, they were ...

  4. 15. Okt. 1976 · LONDON, Oct. 14‐Dame Edith Evans, a legend of the English theater in her own lifetime, died at her home in Cranbrook, Kent, today. She was 88 years old. She died after a brief illness. She was ...

  5. Edith Evans (8. února 1888 – 14. října 1976) byla anglická herečka. Narodila se v londýnské čtvrti Pimlico . Své první herecké zkušenosti měla s amatérskou skupinou Streatham Shakespeare Players, debutovala v roce 1910 coby Viola v Shakespearově Večeru tříkrálovém .

  6. www.thestage.co.uk › features › greatest-stage-actors-edith-evansGreatest Stage Actors: Edith Evans

    25. Feb. 2011 · By the time I first saw Edith Evans, in James Bridie’s play Daphne Laureola at the Wyndham’s Theatre in 1949, she was acknowledged as the grande dame of the English stage, rivalled only by ...

  7. 4. Sept. 2006 · Original version published by the Times Literary Supplement, 2006. 1: Edith Evans as Lady Bracknell in Oscar Wilde’s “The Importance of Being Earnest”, a role she first played in 1939. 2: The CD reissue (2006) of Edith Evans’s celebrated recordings of scenes from eighteenth-century comedy. Its notes are written by Alastair Macaulay.