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  1. 28. Apr. 2022 · Around the same time, she married businessman Ludlow Ogden Smith. Hepburn then began to perform on Broadway before making the change to film. In 1932, she starred in her first onscreen role in "A Bill of Divorcement." Hepburn quickly became a full-fledged star and by 1933, she had won her first Academy Award for her role in "Morning Glory ...

  2. Ludlow Ogden Smith (Q22326909) From Wikidata. Jump to navigation Jump to search. American socialite-businessman (1899-1979); ex-husband of Katharine Hepburn. S. Ogden Ludlow ; Ludlow Smith; Luddy Smith; Ludlow O. Smith; Ogden Ludlow; edit. Language Label ...

  3. When Ludlow Ogden Smith was born on 6 February 1899, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, his father, Lewis Lawrence Smith, was 34 and his mother, Gertrude Gouverneur Clemson, was 30. He married Katharine Houghton Hepburn on 12 December 1928, in West Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United States.

  4. 12. Jan. 2024 · Ludlow Ogden Smith didn’t have any children with his ex-wife Katharine Hepburn. There are no records of his kids with Katharine available. According to sources, Ludlow and Katharine considered having their first child but that didn’t happen because, Katharine landed a leading role in the Broadway show “The Warrior’s Husband,” and that delayed any thoughts of parenthood.

  5. Ludlow Ogden Smith was a Philadelphia businessman. Ludlow was president of Ogden Ludlow Inc. and the creator of the Ludlow Formula, a precursor to computerized systems in financial institutions. He married Katharine Hepburn in 1928; she was 21 and he was 29. They met while she was in her senior year at Bryn Mawr...

  6. Ludlow Ogden Smith (1899-1979), US industrialist, as a young man in US Navy uniform circa 1919. Smith, a businessman and socialite from Philadelphia, is most famous for his marriage to US actress Katherine Hepburn (1907-2003).

  7. 7. Nov. 2017 · (Hepburn had married Ludlow Ogden Smith in 1928 and became a housewife in Strafford, Pennsylvania, for, oh, about two weeks, although the marriage lasted six years.) When The Philadelphia Story opened on Broadway in 1939, it ran for over four hundred performances and a couple of hundred more on tour, and thanks to a canny contract, Hepburn reaped almost half the profits.