Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Matilda Beatrice deMille (January 30, 1853 – October 8, 1923) (born Matilda Beatrice Samuel; also known as Beatrice C. deMille, Agnes Graham, Tillie Samuel, Mrs. Henry deMille) was an English-American play broker, screenwriter, playwright, theater actress and entrepreneur.

  2. In 1876 de Mille married Matilda Beatrice "Bebe" Samuel (1853–1923), a native of Liverpool who had come to America with her parents when she was about eighteen. Their son William C. deMille was born in 1878, Cecil B. DeMille in 1881 and daughter Agnes de Mille some ten years later.

  3. DeMille was named after his grandmothers Cecelia Wolff and Margarete Blount. [7] He was the second of three children of Henry Churchill de Mille (September 4, 1853 – February 10, 1893) and his wife, Matilda Beatrice deMille (née Samuel; January 30, 1853 – October 8, 1923), known as Beatrice. [8]

  4. William C. de Mille [2] wurde 1878 als Sohn von Henry Churchill De Mille, einem erfolgreichen Bühnenautoren, und Matilda Beatrice Samuel geboren. Er studierte zunächst Kunst an der Columbia University, bevor er an der American Academy of Dramatic Arts einen Schauspielkurs absolvierte.

  5. Beatrice deMille was born Matilda Beatrice Samuel in Liverpool, England. She immigrated with her family to New York in 1871. Though her family and friends called her Tillie growing up, when she met Henry deMille, he immediately started calling her Beatrice, after Dante’s Beatrice.

  6. 5. Dez. 2003 · In 1923, a year before Charlton Heston was born, Cecil B. DeMille shot his original version of “The Ten Commandments.” In its day, it was the largest, most popular project ever put on film ...

  7. 29. Sept. 2015 · DeMille discovered his love of acting at a young age, being raised in the theatrical household of Matilda (known by her middle name, Beatrice) and Henry DeMille. Henry was an early Academy instructor and a renowned playwright, who is also credited with giving The American Academy of Dramatic Arts its current name in 1889, and ...