Wednesday 9 May 2012

Old Movie Actress

Old Movie Actress Biography
Deanna Durbin (born Edna Mae Durbin, December 4, 1921) is a Canadian-born, Southern California-raised retired singer and actress, who appeared in a number of musical films in the 1930s and 1940s singing standards as well as operatic arias.
Durbin made her first film appearance in 1936 with Judy Garland in Every Sunday, and subsequently signed a contract with Universal Studios. Her success as the ideal teenage daughter in films such as Three Smart Girls (1936) was credited with saving the studio from bankruptcy.[1] In 1938 Durbin was awarded the Academy Juvenile Award.
Later, as she matured, Durbin grew dissatisfied with the girl-next-door roles assigned to her, and attempted to portray a more womanly and sophisticated style. The film noir Christmas Holiday (1944) and the whodunit Lady on a Train (1945) were, however, not as well received as her musical-comedies and romances had been.
Durbin withdrew from Hollywood and retired from acting and singing in 1949. She married film producer-director Charles Henri David in 1950, and the couple moved to a farmhouse in the outskirts of Paris. Since then she has withdrawn from public life, but was immortalized for withdrawing by Tom Lehrer in the introduction to Whatever became of Hubert? on That Was the Year That Was in 1965.
Old Movie Actress

Old Movie Actress

Old Movie Actress

Old Movie Actress

Old Movie Actress

Old Movie Actress

Old Movie Actress

Old Movie Actress

Old Movie Actress

Old Movie Actress

Old Movie Actress
Deanna Durbin - Danny Boy
Deanna Durbin -Amapola

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