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Nickname:
The Fifth Warner Brother
Height:
5'2"
Spouses:
Gary Merrill (1950 - 1960) (divorced)
William Grant Sherry (1945 - 1950) (divorced); 1 daughter
Arthur Farnsworth (1940 - 1943) (his death)
Harmon Nelson (1932 - 1939)
While
Bette Davis was the star pupil at John Murray Anderson's Dramatic
School in New York, another of her classmates was sent home
because she was "too shy". It was pronounced that this girl
would never make it as an actress. It was Lucille Ball.
(October
1997) Ranked #15 in Empire (UK) magazine's "The Top 100 Movie
Stars of All Time" list.
In
1952, she was asked to perform in a musical, "Two's Company."
After several grueling months at rehearsals, her health deteriorated
due to osteomylitis of the jaw and had to leave the show only
several weeks after it opened. She was to repeat this process
in 1974 when she rehearsed for the musical version of "The
Corn Is Green", called "Miss Moffat" but bowed out early in
the run of the show for dubious medical reasons.
On
her tombstone is written "She did it the hard way".
She
suffered a stroke and a mastectomy in 1983.
Attended
Northfield Mt Hermon high school.
Interred
at Forest Lawn (Hollywood Hills), Los Angeles, California,
USA, just outside and to the left of the main entrance to
the Court of Remembrance.
Mother
of 'Barbara Merrill'
Turned
down the role of Scarlett O'Hara in Gone With The Wind (1939).
Immortalized
in the 1980's song "Bette Davis Eyes" by Kim Carnes.
(19
July 2001) Director Speilberg, Steven won the Christie's auction
of Bette Davis' 1938 Best Actress Oscar for Jezebel for $578,000.
He then gave it to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences.
When
Bette learned that her new brother-in-law was a recovering
alcoholic, she sent the couple a dozen cases of liquor for
a wedding present.
Bette
was elected as first female president of the American Academy
of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in October 1941. She resigned
less then two months later, publicly declaring herself too
busy to fulfill her duties as president while angrily protesting
in private that the Academy had wanted her to serve as a mere
figurehead for the company.
She
considered her debut screen test for MGM to be so bad that
she ran screaming from the projection room.
Her
first husband Arthur Farnsworth was killed in an accidental
fall in which he took a blow to the head.
Her
real true love was director William Wyler but he was married
and refused to leave his wife.
In
"Marked Woman" (1937) Davis is forced to testify in court
after being worked over by some Mafia hoods. Disgusted with
the tiny bandage supplied by the makeup department, she left
the set, had her own doctor bandage her face more realistically,
and refused to shoot the scene any other way.
When
she first came to Hollywood as a contract player, Universal
Pictures wanted to change her name to Bettina Dawes. She informed
the studio that she refused to go through life with a name
that sounded like "Between the Drawers".
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