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  1. 28. Sept. 2009 · Frequent co-star to James Cagney, Clark Gable, Edward G. Robinson, and Humphrey Bogart, friend to Judy Garland, Barbara Stanwyck, and Bette Davis, and wife of Dick Powell and Mike Todd, Joan Blondell was a true Hollywood insider. By the time of her death, she had made nearly 100 films in a career that spanned over fifty years.

  2. 23. Juli 2023 · Joan Blondell had a long career, with credits that date back to 1930. In "Grease," she played Vi, the head waitress at the Frosty Palace. Blondell became a fixture of Hollywood's Golden Age during her mid-20s and continued working until her death in 1979, one year after "Grease" was released. However, it was for a tragic reason that she never stopped working.

  3. 18. Juli 2019 · Joan Blondell: Facts, Career, Cause of Death. Joan Blondell lived for 73 years, a majority of which was spent entertaining half of the viewers with her skills and charming the other half with her blonde hair, blue eyes, and shapely figure. Blondell died more than forty years ago and here am I expected to write some 1000-odd words about her.

  4. Blondie Johnson (1933) -- (Movie Clip) Stop Being So Ambitious Having earned each other’s respect, Danny (Chester Morris) and new-in-town Blondie (Joan Blondell, in a role written for her by Warner Bros. stalwart Earl Baldwin) pitch his gangster boss Max (Arthur Vinton) on her plan to get a henchman out of a murder charge, then consider further options, in Blondie Johnson, 1933.

  5. Blondell was widely seen in two films released not long before her death – Grease (1978), and the remake of The Champ (1979) with Jon Voight and Rick Schroder. She also appeared in two films released after her death – The Glove (1979), and The Woman Inside (1981).

  6. 8. Jan. 2021 · Blondell Makes Producer Mike Todd Husband No. 3. Off-screen, Blondell and Powell divorced in 1944. Each soon remarried, Powell to actress June Allyson and Blondell to movie producer and general bad-boy Mike Todd. But according to Blondell biographer Matthew Kennedy, Todd was violent and a gambler, and forced them into a controversial bankruptcy ...

  7. Vacancy for Death: Directed by Robert Mulligan. With Joan Blondell, Steven Elliott, Dorothy Hart, Oliver Thorndike. Clara and Sam Warren own a run-down boarding house which acts as a front for their real business: arranging for their boarders to have "accidents."