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  1. Katharine Cornell. Performer. Born: Feb 16, 1898 in Berlin, Germany Death: Jun 09, 1974 in Tisbury, Massachusetts Roles (62) Dear Liar Opened March 17, 1960 as Mrs. Patrick Campbell (Original) The ...

  2. Katharine Cornell. Reparto: Producers' Showcase. Katharine Cornell nació el 16 de febrero de 1893 en Berlín, Alemania. Fue una actriz, conocida por Producers' Showcase (1954), Tres días de amor y de fe (1943) y No Time for Comedy (1940).

  3. Katharine Cornell, 1898–1974, American actress, b. Berlin. Cornell made her debut in 1916 with the Washington Square Players. In 1921 she married Guthrie McClintic, a producer-director. From their first production together, The Green Hat in 1925, they proved to be a successful team, with such productions as The Barretts of Wimpole Street (1931, repeated on television, 1956), Saint Joan (1936 ...

  4. In Dänemark wurde Katharine in den letzten 10 Jahren weniger als 10 Mal als Erstname vergeben (10 Mal von 1985 bis 2022). Platzierungen von Katharine in der Vornamen-Hitliste von Dänemark in den Jahren 1985-2022: England--367: 205 (1997) In England wurde Katharine in den letzten 10 Jahren ca. 70 Mal als Erstname vergeben (1.200 Mal von 1996 ...

  5. 27. Okt. 2022 · The Katharine Cornell papers are arranged in eight series: Series I: Correspondence. 1899 - 1983. 35 boxes. This series contains correspondence to and from Katharine Cornell, Gertrude Macy, Nancy Hamilton and Guthrie McClintic, though the bulk of this correspondence is Cornell’s. Types of correspondence include business correspondence fan ...

  6. Katharine Cornell (1893-1974) was an actor, writer and producer who is considered one of the foremost actors in American theatre. Her most prominent Broadway roles include Elizabeth Barrett Browning in The Barretts of Wimpole Street (1931) and Juliet in Romeo and Juliet (1934). Born into a prominent family, Cornell was raised in Buffalo, New ...

  7. From 1922 to 1951, “First Lady of the Theater” Katharine Cornell (1893-1974) and her husband, director-producer Guthrie McClintic (1893-1961), lived in a Midtown townhouse at 23 Beekman Place, near the East River. Their house was called a “veritable theatrical museum” by a guest who visited them in the 1940s.