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  1. Humphrey DeForest Bogart ( / ˈboʊɡɑːrt / BOH-gart; [1] December 25, 1899 – January 14, 1957), colloquially nicknamed Bogie, was an American actor. His performances in classic Hollywood cinema films made him an American cultural icon. [2] In 1999, the American Film Institute selected Bogart as the greatest male star of classic American ...

  2. Humphrey, Maud, b. 1868) Wikipedia, Aug. 20, 2016 (Maud Humphrey; born March 30, 1868 in Rochester, N.Y.; died 1940; commercial illustrator, water colorist, and suffragette; she studied at the Art Students League of New York and in Paris at the Julian Academy; she was the mother of actor Humphrey Bogart)

  3. 7. Jan. 1997 · Maud Humphrey was one of the most popular illustrators in America at the turn of the century. Unfortunately, through the years, Maud's impact on American illustration was lost, until it seemed her only claim to fame was as the mother of Hollywood legend Humphrey Bogart. However, Maud's role on the American art scene was as remarkable as any role her son ever played on stage or screen. Today ...

    • Paperback
    • Karen Choppa
  4. MAUD HUMPHREY (AMERICAN, 1868-1940) ADVERTISING CHILDREN'S PRINTS, LOT OF TWO, each chromolithograph on paper, each having an embossed scroll border with gilded outline, comprising an example with two girls having a snow ball fight having two advertisements to the reverse for Dr. Belding Skin Remedy and Dr. Belding's Six Prairie Herbs Cough and ...

  5. Humphrey Maud was the son of the civil servant and diplomat John Redcliffe-Maud, Baron Redcliffe-Maud and his wife, the pianist Jean Hamilton. [1] He attended Eton College, where he was a favourite of Benjamin Britten - Britten dedicated The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra to Humphrey and his siblings - though Humphrey's father eventually ...

  6. 6. Nov. 2013 · Issued in three simultaneous editions featuring one, six, or twelve color illustrations (all here), the book was by Maud Humphrey, who, in the same year, married Dr. Belmont De Forest Bogart. A year later, on Christmas Day, she bore a son. The couple named him Humphrey. Maud Humphrey was born in 1868 to a well-to-do family in Rochester, New York.

  7. Maud Humphrey painted angelic children nestling up to Madonnalike mothers in a series of successful books that began in the 1890s with The Bride's Book. Her own children, however, seemed little more than biological evidence that she had done her duty as a wife. They knew their place; it was with the servants, to whom they were shunted off in the routine manner of the day, always secondary to ...