2013년 11월 28일 목요일

About 'bright star home health care'|...or BN cops or local cops. Little John had developed a healthy allergy to cops and jail. He just wanted to “get by”. Officer Benton and...







About 'bright star home health care'|...or BN cops or local cops. Little John had developed a healthy allergy to cops and jail. He just wanted to “get by”. Officer Benton and...









As               long               as               Hollywood               has               existed,               it               has               employed               children               to               appear               in               films.

Before               there               was               Jodie               Foster               or               Lindsay               Lohan               or               the               Olsen               Twins               or               Shia               LaBeouf               or               any               of               the               other               innumerable,               ever-changing               list               of               child               actors               of               more               recent               times,               there               were               child               actors               of               an               earlier               generation               who               were               ,               I               believe,               far               more               talented.

During               Hollywood's               beginnings               and               throughout               its               Golden               Years,               there               were               many               young               actors               and               actresses               who               stood               out.

The               ten               I               consider               to               be               the               most               gifted               among               them               are               as               follows:
               Jackie               Coogan               
               
               There               had               been               child               actors               in               silent               films               before,               but               Jackie               Coogan               became               more               famous               than               all               of               them.

He               was               probably               the               first               real               child               star               in               movies.
               Coogan               started               in               vaudeville,               delighting               audiences               with               his               precocious               performances.

His               abilities               brought               him               to               the               attention               of               the               great               screen               comic               Charlie               Chaplin,               who               put               him               in               the               title               role               of               "The               Kid."               The               story               of               the               cute,               large-eyed               waif               taken               care               of               by               Chaplin's               The               Tramp               character               made               movie-goers               both               laugh               and               cry,               and               the               film               became               a               gigantic               commercial               hit.

Jackie               also               starred               in               the               films               "Oliver               Twist,"               "Circus               Days,"               "Little               Robinson               Crusoe,"               "The               Rag               Man,"               "Peck's               Bad               Boy"               and               "Buttons."
               Much               like               the               child               actors               of               our               day,               big               business               was               made               as               his               name               and               likeness               were               used               to               sell               everything               from               peanut               butter               to               records.

He               personally               earned               millions               over               the               course               of               his               childhood               acting               career..
               His               legal               battle               with               his               mother               over               his               earnings               led               to               the               California               Child               Actors'               Bill,               which               requires               the               parents               of               kid               actors               to               put               15%               of               their               income               into               a               trust               for               them.

Thanks               to               that               law,               a               lot               of               child               actors               owe               a               debt               of               appreciation               to               Jackie               Coogan.

Unfortunately,               it               was               too               late               for               him               to               benefit               from               the               passage               of               this               law,               since               his               greedy               mother               and               stepdad               had               pretty               much               run               through               most               of               his               money.
               Although               Coogan               did               keep               working,               his               popularity               waned               as               he               grew               older.

He               married               four               times,               including               once               to               actress               Betty               Grable,               fought               in               World               War               II               and               returned               to               the               film               industry,               albeit               no               longer               famous.
               It               was               television               that               revitalized               his               career.

Today's               television               audiences               should               remember               him               from               the               1960's               series               "The               Adams               Family,"               in               which               he               played               the               delightfully               kooky               Uncle               Fester.
               
               Jackie               Cooper
               Jackie               Cooper               first               got               noticed               when               he               appeared               in               a               number               of               :Hal               Roach's               "Our               Gang"               comedy               shorts.

From               there,               he               launched               into               a               solo               career               and               starred               in               such               films               as               "The               Champ,"               "               O'Shaughnessy's               Boy,"               "Skippy,"               "Dinky,""Treasure               Island"               and               "The               Bowery."
               The               adorable,               towheaded               boy               with               blonde               hair,               pug               nose               and               deep               voice               charmed               fans               worldwide               during               the               1930's               and               he               became               one               of               the               most               heralded               child               actors               of               his               day.
               Following               the               pattern               of               most               child               actors,               getting               older               decreased               his               popularity,               but               it               hardly               made               him               self-destruct.

He               served               in               the               military               during               World               War               II               and               returned'               to               a               somewhat               stalled               career,               which               took               off               again,               thanks               to               television.

Not               only               did               he               star               in               guests               roles,               such               as               the               "Dummy"               episode               on               "The               Twilight               Zone,"               two               of               his               own               television               shows-               "Hennesey,"               and               "People's               Choice"-               but               the               revival               of               interest               in               the               old               "Our               Gang"               shorts,               now               called               "The               Little               Rascal,"               has               garnered               a               whole               new               appreciation               for               his               career               as               a               child               actor.
               Jackie               Copper               later               became               an               award-winning               television               director.
               
               Shirley               Temple               
               
               Who               hasn't               heard               of               Shirley               Temple?
               She               probably               deserves               the               title               of               "most               famous               child               actor               of               all               time,"               due               to               the               films               she               made               and               the               intense               merchandising               that               accompanied               her               career.

Even               now,               in               2006,               she               has               a               large               fan               base               and               people               still               collect               Shirley               Temple               memorabilia,               such               as               the               highly               sought-after               dolls               in               her               likeness.
               After               appearing               in               a               few               movie               shorts,               Fox               Film               Corporation               signed               her               to               a               contract               and               she               began               making               the               films               that               brought               her               fame               and               provided               the               studio               with               lots               of               profits.

Shirley               was               more               popular               than               many               adult               stars.

Her               dimples,               curly               blonde               locks               and               precocious               dancing               talent               kept               her               at               the               head               of               the               box               office.

Fox               almost               went               into               a               financial               decline               and               it               was               Shirley's               movies               that               kept               their               studio               from               going               under.

She               even               earned               a               Juvenile               Performer               Academy               award               in               1935.
               Her               most               well-known               films               are               "Stand               Up               and               Cheer,"               "The               Little               Colonel,"               "Heidi,"               "The               Littlest               Rebel,"               "Bright               Eyes,"               "Just               Around               the               Corner"               and               "Rebecca               of               Sunnybrook               Farm."               Many               may               not               know               that               the               part               of               Dorothy               in               the               classic"The               Wizard               of               Oz"               was               originally               intended               for               Shirley,               but               studio               politics               foiled               her               being               cast.
               Children               do               grow               up,               however,               and               as               she               transitioned               into               adolescence,               her               hair               darkening               and               her               figure               beginning               to               bloom,               her               popularity               was               not               as               great               as               it               was               during               her               earlier               years.

Still               she               got               parts               in               decent               films               like               "Since               You               Went               Away"               and               "The               Bachelor               and               the               Bobbysoxer."
               When               actor               Ronald               Reagan               gave               Shirley               her               first               screen               kiss               in               the               movie               "That               Hagen               Girl,"               some               of               her               fans               had               problems               accepting               the               fact               that               "their"               Shirley               had               grown               up.
               She               married               her               "Fort               Apache"               costar,               B-list               actor               John               Agar,               whom               she               later               divorced,               and               then               married               Charles               Black,               a               businessman.

She               and               Black               had               two               children.
               Her               life               beyond               films               has               been               extremely               successful.
               Her               involvement               in               the               political               arena               resulted               in               her               being               appointed               as               the               American               ambassador               to               Ghana               from               1974-1976,               as               well               as               obtaining               a               prestigious               position               in               the               state               department               and               serving               on               the               boards               of               a               number               of               organizations,               such               as               "The               United               Nations               Association."
               After               winning               a               highly-publicized               battle               with               breast               cancer               and               continuing               to               receive               several               honors,               she               retired               to               Woodside,               California,               where               she               still               receives               fan               mail.
               One               could               say               that,               in               terms               of               ultimate               success,               Shirley               Temple               is               the               most               fortunate               of               all               former               child               actors.
               
               Freddie               Bartholomew               
               
               Freddie               Bartholomew               was               surely               one               of               the               most               eloquent               of               child               actors.
               His               Hollywood               career               began               when               he               was               cast               in               the               1935               version               of               "David               Copperfield,"               based               on               the               Charles               Dickens               novel.

His               curly               hair,               dimples,               beautiful               face               and               articulate,               British-accented               speech               made               him               very               popular               with               audiences.
               He               was               second               only               to               Shirley               Temple               in               terms               of               earnings.

Sadly,               most               of               those               earnings               were               lost,               due               to               legal               battles               with               his               alcoholic               mother,               who               attempted               to               gain               custody               of               him,               once               she               saw               the               money               rolling               in.

He               had               been               brought               up               by               his               aunt               after               his               dysfunctional               parents               had               abandoned               him,               so               their               new               interest               in               him               was               purely               for               financial               reasons.

Some               of               his               most               well-known               films               were               "Little               Lord               Fauntleroy,"               "Anna               Karenina,"               "Captains               Courageous,"               "Kidnapped,"               "The               Devil               Is               a               Sissy"               and               "Lloyd's               of               London."
               As               he               got               older,               he               fell               out               of               favor               with               movie               audiences,               who               no               longer               preferred               the               types               of               movies               he               had               been               most               identified               with               and,               after               a               stint               in               the               Air               Force               during               World               War               II,               he               eventually               decided               to               turn               his               back               on               Hollywood.

Understandably,               he               harbored               considerable               resentment               towards               an               industry               that               had               so               easily               used,               then               discarded               him.


               Things               had               gotten               so               bad               for               him               financially,               at               one               point,               that               he               and               his               wife               had               to               live               in               a               car.
               He               got               divorced               twice               and               suffered               from               alcoholism               for               awhile,               but               recovered               from               that               addiction.
               He               did               return               to               the               entertainment               world               in               one               form,               however,               when               he               became               a               soap               opera               producer.

Before               he               died               from               emphysema               in               1992,               he               was               even               able               to               reconcile               himself               to               his               past               days               as               a               Hollywood               child               star.
               
               Margaret               O'Brien
               Margaret               O'Brien               was               one               of               Hollywood's               cutest               child               actresses               during               the               1940's,               as               well               as               one               of               its               best               young               actresses.

She               was               only               five               years               old               when               she               starred               as               a               war               orphan               in               "Journey               for               Margaret,"               and               her               acting               skills,               even               at               so               young               an               age,               were               apparent               to               both               critics               and               movie               audiences.
               Her               films               include               "Jane               Eyre,"               "Meet               Me               In               St.

Louis,"               "The               Canterville               Ghost,"               "The               Secret               Garden"               and               "Little               Women."               Her               acting               ability               was               so               great               that               she               often               was               able               to               steal               scenes               from               her               adult               co-stars               and,               at               one               point,               she               became               the               number               one               box               office               draw               in               America.
               Margaret               O'Brien               left               Hollywood               in               the               1950's-healthy,               wealthy               and               relatively               unfazed.

In               comparison               to               some               of               her               fellow               former               child               actors,               most               of               her               Hollywood               experiences               were               very               positive.
               
               Mickey               Rooney               
               
               Mickey               Rooney               was,               without               a               doubt,               one               of               the               most               gifted               of               all               child               actors               and               has               had               a               more               lasting               professional               career               than               most               of               his               peers.

He               was               and               is               a               multi-talented               actor,               dancer               and               singer.
               Born               to               vaudevillians,               his               first               film               role               of               note               was               as               Mickey               McGuire               in               the               "Mickey               McGuire"               silent               comedy               shorts.

He               went               on               to               get               a               contract               from               M-G-M,               which               began               a               long               and               lucrative               relationship.

He               appeared               in               the               "Andy               Hardy"               series,               "Boys               Town,"               "Little               Lord               Fauntleroy,"               "A               Midsummer's               Night               Dream,"               "The               Adventures               of               Huckleberry               Finn,"               "Ah,               Wilderness,"               "National               Velvet"               and               "The               Human               Comedy."
               What               he               is               probably               best               remembered               for,               however,               is               the               musicals               he               starred               in,               many               of               them               with               fellow               child               star               Judy               Garland.

Their               films               together               included               "Babes               in               Arms,"               "Strike               Up               the               Band,"               "Girl               Crazy,"               "Babes               On               Broadway"               and               "Words               and               Music."
               Though               there               was               a               slight               lull               in               his               career               after               his               return               from               serving               in               the               military               during               Word               War               II,               he               continued               and               still               continues               to               work               in               films               and               also               appear               on               television..
               One               of               the               things               that               has               also               captured               as               much               attention               as               his               career               is               his               number               of               marriages               ...eight               at               last               count.
               
               Judy               Garland
               Judy               Garland               started               out               as               a               child               actor               and               grew               up               to               became               a               legend.

In               spite               of               all               of               the               acclaim               she               received               for               her               incredible               singing               voice               and               other               gifts,               she               became               one               of               Hollywood's               saddest               figures.
               Born               Frances               Gumm,               she               sang               with               her               sisters               "Jimmie"               and               "Susie,"               where               they               were               pushed               into               show               business               by               their               rather               ambitious               stage-mother,               Ethel.
               Frances's               professional               name               was               changed               to               "Judy               Garland"               and               it               didn't               take               long               to               figure               out               who               was               the               breakout               talent               in               the               group               of               sisters.

After               she               sang               a               song               dedicated               to               movie               star               Clark               Gable-               "You               Made               Me               Love               You"-               at               an               M-G-M               birthday               bash               for               him,               the               studio               put               her               under               contract.

Giving               her               great               moral               support               was               studio               composer               and               associate               producer,               Roger               Edens,               who               was               instrumental               in               helping               her               develop               as               an               artist.
               As               we               all               know,               the               movie               that               made               her               a               star               was               "The               Wizard               of               Oz,"               in               which               she               played               Dorothy               Gale.

No               one               who               sees               this               movie,               to               this               day,               can               resist               being               touched               by               her               vulnerable               performance.

Judy's               career               took               off               like               a               whirlwind               from               that               point,               as               she               made               successful               movie               after               movie.
               Unfortunately,               the               studio               put               her               on               the               merry-go-round               of               the               prescription               drugs-barbiturates               and               amphetamines-               with               the               intention               of               keeping               her               going               through               the               long               days               of               filming,               then               helping               her               to               sleep               at               night               and               also               to               lose               weight.

This               was               contributory               to               her               later               struggles               with               addiction.
               Her               other               films               include               "Love               Finds               Andy               Hardy,"               "Ziegfeld               Girl,"               "Easter               Parade,"               "Meet               Me               In               St.

Louis,"               "For               Me               and               My               Gal,"               "The               Harvey               Girls,"               "The               Clock,"               "In               The               Good               Old               Summertime,"               "A               Star               Is               Born,"               (for               which               she               received               an               Oscar               nomination,               but               lost               to               Grace               Kelly),and               "Judgment               at               Nuremberg."               After               her               suicide               attempt               and               other               mental               health               issues               that               made               her               undependable               ,               M-G-M               had               little               choice               except               to               let               her               go.
               She               went               on               to               conquer               television               with               an               Emmy-award-winning               variety               show,               "The               Judy               Garland               Show,"               perform               in               several               successful               concert               tours               and               make               best-selling               recordings.
               Judy               had               all               the               things               you               might               think               would               make               a               happy               life,               but               her               personal               demons               caused               her               existence               to               be               disastrous               and               eventually               impeded               on               the               success               of               her               professional               life.

She               continued               to               be               addicted               to               prescription               drugs               and               alcohol,               married               five               times,               and               on               June               22,               1969,               was               discovered               dead               from               an               accidental               drug               overdose               in               her               hotel               bathroom.
               She               was               just               47-years-old.
               Despite               the               tragedy               of               her               life,               Judy               Garland's               status               as               a               show               business               legend               remains               as               strong               as               ever.
               If               you               ever               want               to               get               an               idea               of               what               her               life               was               really               like,               I               recommend               trying               to               get               a               copy               of               "Life               With               Judy               Garland:               Me               and               My               Shadow,"               a               Lifetime               Television               movie               based               on               the               book               by               Garland's               daughter               Lorna               Luft               and               starring               actress               Judy               Davis               as               Judy               Garland.
               
               Roddy               McDowell
               Roddy               McDowell               was               one               of               the               most               successful               child               actors               of               the               1940's.The               British-born               McDowell               was               yet               another               M-G-M               discovery.
               He               gave               a               compelling               performance               in               his               first               M-G-M               film,               "How               Green               Was               My               Valley,"               in               which               he               played               Huw,               (yep,               that's               the               correct               spelling),               the               youngest               child               in               a               family               of               Welsh               coal-miners.
               Some               of               his               other               well-received               films               were               "Lassie               Come               Home,"               "The               White               Cliffs               of               Dover,"               "My               Friend               Flicka,"               and               "Thunderhead,               Son               of               Flicka."               He               continued               to               make               films               as               an               adult,               although               no               longer               in               starring               roles.

Some               of               his               most               notable               appearances               were               in               "Cleopatra"               "The               Poseiden               Adventure"               and               four               of               the               "Planet               of               the               Apes"               movies.

Horror               film               fans               may               remember               him               as               vampire               killer               Peter               Vincent               in               "Fright               Night."
               He               also               acted               on               television.

I               remember               him               particularly               in               the               pilot               for               Rod               Serling's               "Night               Gallery"               series.

The               segment               he               was               in               was               titled               "Cemetary."               Roddy               played               a               sinister               character               named               Jeremy               Evans,               who               brings               about               his               ailing,               wealthy               uncle's               death               in               order               to               get               his               inheritance,               but               is               gradually               driven               insane               by               a               painting               that               appears               to               keep               changing               and               showing               his               dead               uncle               rising,               walking               from               the               graveyard,               getting               nearer               and               nearer               to               the               house,               then               up               to               the               door.

When               he               hears               the               sound               of               pounding               on               the               front               door,               the               terrified               man               falls               down               the               stairway               to               his               death.

As               scary               a               thing               as               I've               ever               looked               at,               so               much               so               that,               to               this               day,               if               it               comes               on,               I               cannot               watch               it.
               After               a               long               career               as               an               actor               and               photographer,               Rodney               McDowell               died               from               cancer               on               October               3,               1998.
               
               Peggy               Ann               Garner
               Peggy               Ann               Garner               is               probably               one               of               the               most               underrated               of               Classic               Hollywood's               child               actors.

She               never               became               as               well-known               as               the               others               on               this               list,               but               her               few               film               performances               were               sensitive               and               beautifully               done.
               Like               many               young               film               actresses,               Peggy               Ann               had               an               aggressive               stage               mother               who               pushed               her               into               child               modeling               and               the               stage.

As               expected,               her               mom               took               her               to               Hollywood,               where               she               got               a               role               in               an               Ann               Sheridan               picture,               "Little               Miss               Thoroughbred."
               Some               of               her               other               films               include               "The               Keys               of               the               Kingdom,"               "In               Name               Only,"               "Jane               Eyre,"               "A               Tree               Grows               In               Brooklyn,"               (which               netted               her               a               Juvenile               Academy               Award),and               "Daisy               Kenyon."
               Typical               of               many               child               actors,               growing               up               stymied               her               movie               career               and               she               eventually               left               Hollywood               for               the               stage.
               She               died               on               October               16,               1984.
               
               Elizabeth               Taylor
               Elizabeth               Taylor               was               one               of               the               most               beautiful               child               actresses               of               the               screen               who               grew               up               to               become               one               of               its               most               breathtaking               and               intriguing               adult               actresses.
               Born               in               England               to               American               parents,               Elizabeth               moved               to               Los               Angeles               with               them               and,               after               a               screen               test,               was               signed               by               Universal               Studios.

At               the               age               of               nine-years-old.,               she               appeared               in               her               first               movie,               "There's               One               Born               Every               Minute."               Universal               obviously               did               not               realize               the               potential               goldmine               they               had               and               released               her               from               her               contract.

M-G-M               very               wsely               signed               her.
               As               a               child               actress,               she               had               parts               in               several               notable               films               of               the               1940's.

Among               them               was               "Lassie,               Come               Home,"               "The               Courage               of               Lassie,"               "National               Velvet,"               and               "The               White               Cliffs               of               Dover."
               Unlike               many               child               stars,               adolescence               did               not               diminish               her               career,               chiefly               because,               as               she               grew               older,               her               beauty               was               all               the               more               extraordinary.

As               a               teenager,               she               appeared               in               "Cynthia,"               "A               Date               With               Judy"               and               "Little               Women."               She               eventually               began               to               have               more               grownup               roles,               such               as               in               "Conspirator,"               "Father               of               the               Bride,,"               "Father's               Little               Dividend"               and               "A               Place               In               the               Sun."
               From               that               time               onward,               Taylor               continued               to               make               numerous               movies               and               become               even               more               famous               than               she               had               been               as               a               child.

Her               roles               became               more               mature,               even               controversial,               in               such               motion               pictures               as               "               The               Last               Time               I               Saw               Paris,"               "Raintree               County,"               "Giant,"               "Cat               On               a               Hot               Tin               Roof,"               "Butterfield               8,"               and               "Cleopatra."               She               won               two               Best               Actress               Oscars,               for               playing               a               call               girl               in               "Butterfield               8"               and               as               an               alcoholic               wife               in               "Who's               Afraid               of               Virginia               Wolfe?"
               Her               personal               life               has               been               as               colorful               as               her               movie               career               and               she               has               been               married               a               total               of               eight               times,               her               most               well-known               marriages               (2)               being               to               actor               Richard               Burton.

News               of               her               illnesses,               alcohol               binges,               fluctuating               weight               and               extravagant               lifestyle               has               filled               many               a               gossip               column.

Taylor               has               also               done               theater               and               appeared               on               television.

Her               charitable               work               regarding               research               for               AIDS               has               gained               her               additional               recognition.
               As               of               the               writing,               she               is               now               74-years-old               and               said               to               be               in               poor               health.

Still               she               continues               to               have               countless               fans               and               is,               in               truth,               what               could               be               considered               as               one               of               our               last               remaining               "real"               movie               stars.
               Elizabeth               Taylor               has               truly               become               a               national               treasure.






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