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1-7 of 7
- Actress
- Additional Crew
Poised and pretty lead and second lead actress Jane Randolph decorated a number of second-string World War II and post-war 1940's film features. Born Joan Roemer in Youngstown, Ohio on October 30, 1914, her father, a steel-mill designer, moved the family to Kokomo, Indiana when she was still quite young. Following her graduation from high school, she studied at Indiana's DePauw University, where she was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta. Jane's interest was acting was increasingly prodded during this time and in 1939, she decided to try her luck in Hollywood.
Studying at Max Reinhardt's school, she was eventually tested and picked up by Warner Bros in 1941. Publicized as a WWII pin-up in such Army magazines as Yank, and provided only in bit parts while there, such as a hatcheck girl in Manpower (1941), a singer who warbles the tune "What's New?" in the film Dive Bomber (1941) and a secretary in The Male Animal (1942), RKO Studios saw promise in the nascent actress. Picking up her contract in 1942, the studio immediately handed her two "B" leading lady roles -- as rich, naïve inventor Richard Carlson's love interest in the adventure comedy Highways by Night (1942) and spunky girl reporter Marcia Brooks in the Nazi espionage crime drama The Falcon's Brother (1942) opposite real-life brothers Tom Conway and George Sanders.
Over the years, brown-eyed, auburn-haired Jane would become best known for her benign, classy, but vulnerable femmes in film noir, easy comedy and whodunnits. Her best-remembered role was as poor, tormented co-worker Alice Moore in the atmospheric horror classic Cat People (1942) and its equally successful sequel, The Curse of the Cat People (1944). In both, Jane innocently brings out the revengeful claws of feral lady cat Simone Simon. At one point she was hired by the Disney people as a human model used for the ice-skating sequence with "Bambi" and "Thumper" in their classic film Bambi (1942).
As for subsequent filming, Jane would return to her intrepid girl reporter in The Falcon Strikes Back (1943), again with Conway. She was also featured in a poignant scene with lovely Jeanne Crain in the war-themed film In the Meantime, Darling (1944); is married to Nils Asther but in love with doctor John Loder in the film noir Jealousy (1945); involves herself with the Bowery Boys in Monogram Picture's In Fast Company (1946); played an attractive second lead distraction in the Universal adventure serial The Mysterious Mr. M (1946) and an equally attractive lead in the "Hopalong Cassidy" western entry Fool's Gold (1946).
Jane enjoyed a rare femme fatale role as a conniving beautician and girlfriend of cold-blooded mobster John Ireland in the film noir Railroaded! (1947). She finished her career in two other film noir thrillers, T-Men (1947) and Open Secret (1948), and joined Bud Abbott and Lou Costello in, arguably, their most popular Universal outing, the comedy chiller Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948). Here, all three are menaced by the classic terror trio of Lon Chaney Jr.'s Wolfman, Bela Lugosi's Dracula and Glenn Strange's Frankenstein monster.
Divorced from talent agent Bert D'Armand, Jane married sometime producer Jaime del Amo on April 20, 1949, and retired to move to Spain and live the life of a socialite. In later years, following his death, she returned to Los Angeles, but also maintained a home in Gstaad, Switzerland. She died in Switzerland at age 94, of complications following surgery for a broken hip. She was survived by daughter, Cristina del Amo.- Actor
- Producer
- Director
His father, Willy Sachs, ran a ball bearing and motor factory that had been founded by his grandfather Ernst Sachs, who had developed the "Torpedo" bicycle freewheel hub. His maternal great-grandfather was Adam Opel, the founder of the automobile company of the same name. As a result of his parents' separation from 1935, Sachs grew up in Switzerland with his mother Eleonor von Opel. After attending Swiss boarding schools, Sachs first studied mathematics and then economics at the University of Lausanne. Sachs then moved to the Federal Republic of Germany to begin an apprenticeship as a precision mechanic at the Stuttgart company Bosch in 1955. He then completed a banking apprenticeship at Commerzbank Munich. He attended an interpreting course at the University of Nantes, which he completed with a diploma.
Since after his father's death, his older brother, Ernst Wilhelm Sachs, ran the Sachs company's business in Schweinfurt from 1958 onwards, Sachs concentrated on the company's foreign division. He also joined the board of the holding company Sachs AG Munich. During the 1950s he distinguished himself as a brilliant tennis player. In 1954 he also broke the track record twice in the two-man bobsleigh on the St. Moritz run. In 1955 he married Anne-Marie Faure, with whom he had a son and who died in 1958. In 1959, Gunter Sachs won the junior European championship title in the two-man bobsleigh as a member of the St. Moritz Bobsleigh Club. In 1961, Sachs took over the presidency of the St. Moritz Bobsleigh Club. In the 1960s, Sachs was in the spotlight of the tabloid press because of his extravagant lifestyle. On July 14, 1966, he married the French film star Brigitte Bardot in Las Vegas with great fanfare. The marriage ended in divorce in 1969.
In the same year he married the Swedish model Mirja Larsson for the third time. Together, Sachs commuted between the domiciles spread around the world. Sachs then had two other sons with her, Christian Gunnar (1971) and Claus Alexander (1982). In the 1970s, as an art dealer, he became a special supporter of Pop Art. He opened modern art galleries in Hamburg's Milchstrasse and Munich's Villa Stuck. In 1972, Gunter Sachs was the first gallerist to exhibit the American artist Andy Warhol in Germany. This relationship resulted in a close friendship, just like with Salvador Dali. Sachs became a Swiss citizen in 1976. Sachs also demonstrated his own great entrepreneurial skills: from 1965 to 1981 he built up an international chain of fashion boutiques called "Micmac", which ultimately had over 400 branches.
From the mid-1970s onwards, the Sachs brothers gradually sold their shareholdings in the company, which they had sold completely by around the turn of the millennium. In the meantime, Gunter Sachs had long since made a name for himself in the artistic field. Sachs had already begun to develop artistic ambitions in the fields of film and photography in the 1960s. He created seven documentaries, some of which were award-winning, which focus on, among other things, South Sea cultures and other anthropological-ethnic topics. In 1972 he received the first prize from the International Olympic Committee for his film "Happening in White" (1970), a film about winter sports. Sachs' interest in photography dates back to his school days. In 1974 he achieved his international breakthrough in this field through an exhibition at Photokina. His brother Ernst Wilhelm died in an avalanche accident in 1977. By 1988, the art photographer had published four volumes of photographs.
The artist toured the images developed in his Munich photo studio "MM 14 Factory" at numerous exhibitions throughout Europe. In addition to film and photography, Sachs also developed a strong interest in European contemporary art, which also brought him into contact with Yves Klein and numerous other artists. With his wife Mirja, Sachs founded the "Mirja Sachs Foundation for Children in Need" in 1987. With an unusual initiative, Sachs managed to get himself onto the bestseller lists of the German, French and English book trade in the mid-1990s: in 1995 he founded the "Institute for the empirical and mathematical investigation of the possible truth of astrology in relation to human character", which, in cooperation with independent state and private statistical institutes, sought to scientifically substantiate the connection between zodiac signs and behavioral structure in a large-scale study ("The Astrology File").
In the fall of 2005, Gunter Sachs published his autobiography entitled "My Life." His art photographs turned out to be a crowd puller. The exhibition "Art is Female" in the Leipzig Museum of Fine Arts was seen by around 70,000 visitors in 2008.
Gunter Sachs shot himself in Gstaad on May 7, 2011, at the age of 78. In a farewell letter, Sachs justified his suicide with references to an illness from "A".- Writer
- Art Department
- Additional Crew
Richard Scarry was born on 5 June 1919 in Boston, Massachusetts, USA. He was a writer, known for The Busy World of Richard Scarry (1993), 3 Richard Scarry Animal Nursery Tales (1985) and Richard Scarry's Old MacDonald's Farm and Other Animal Tales (1986). He was married to Patricia Murphy. He died on 30 April 1994 in Gstaad, Switzerland.- Jacqueline Ventura was born on 22 August 1931 in Bayeux, Calvados, France. She was an actress, known for ...And God Created Woman (1956), Femmes de Paris (1953) and Man and Child (1956). She was married to Michael Curtis Elliot and Ray Ventura. She died on 19 July 2017 in Gstaad, Bern, Switzerland.
- Nina Kandinsky was born in 1899 in Russia. She was married to Wassily Kandinsky. She died on 2 September 1980 in Gstaad, Switzerland.
- Soundtrack
Harry Goodman was born on 15 August 1906. He died on 22 October 1997 in Gstaad, Switzerland.- Producer
- Writer
- Additional Crew
Sam Waynberg was born on 20 June 1925. Sam was a producer and writer, known for Repulsion (1965), Cul-de-sac (1966) and Z7 Operation Rembrandt (1966). Sam died on 3 December 2011 in Gstaad, Switzerland.