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  1. tr.wikipedia.org › wiki › Fredric_MarchFredric March - Vikipedi

    Fredric March (asıl adı Ernest Frederick McIntyre Bickel; 31 Ağustos 1897 - 14 Nisan 1975), 1930'lu ve 1940'lı yıllarda Hollywood'un en ünlü ve çok yönlü yıldızlarından biri olarak kabul edilen Amerikalı bir oyuncuydu.

  2. Fredric March came to Hollywood with classic good looks, but in his bones he was a character actor. He even said, "Stardom is just an uneasy seat on top of a tricky toboggan. Being a star is merely perching at the head of the downgrade. A competent player can last a lifetime. A star, a year or two." With that attitude, he kept his career going for 50 years and secured a reputation as one of ...

  3. Fredric March was born 124 years ago today; an actor whose final Broadway appearance was in 1962’s Gideon, by Paddy Chayefsky. Fifty-nine years is a long time and there are not many around anymore who can recall March’s sterling stage work in a career that spanned forty-two years on Broadway. But due to his more than eighty films between ...

  4. 8. Apr. 2022 · Ernest Frederick McIntyre Bickel. He was born Ernest Frederick McIntyre Bickel on August 31, 1897 in Racine, Wisconsin. March studied economics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison as a young man. While at university, March was a member of an interfraternity society, formed at the college in 1919, named the Ku Klux Klan.

  5. Tony-díj a legjobb férfi főszereplőnek egy színdarabban (11. Tony-gála, 1957) A Wikimédia Commons tartalmaz Fredric March témájú médiaállományokat. Fredric March (eredeti nevén: Ernest Frederick McIntyre Bickel) ( Racine, Wisconsin, 1897. augusztus 31.

  6. Fredric March, rodným menom Ernest Frederick McIntyre Bickel (* 31. august 1897, Racine, Wisconsin, USA – † 14. apríl 1975, Los Angeles, Kalifornia) bol americký herec. Dvakrát získal Oscara za mužský herecký výkon v hlavnej úlohe.

  7. M ovie legend Fredric March was one of the world's most respected and honored performers of the stage and screen. A handsome 6-footer with a winning smile, March embodied many of Tinseltown's most unforgettable characters for more than half a century, most notably, as the diabolical Mr. Hyde in "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" (1931) for which March won an Academy Award.