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Acteur dans 54 films

Né(e) le 10 août 1902

Lieu de naissance
Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Mort le 12 juin 1983 (à 80 ans)

Norma Shearer

Acteur dans

2008

  • Thou Shalt Not: Sex, Sin and Censorship in Pre-Code Hollywood

2003

  • Complicated Women

2002

  • The Kid Stays in the Picture

1996

  • Joan Crawford: Always the Star

1988

  • The Making of a Legend: Gone with the Wind

1983

  • Hollywood Out-takes and Rare Footage

1974

  • That's Entertainment!
  • That's Entertainment!

1963

  • Hollywood Without Make-Up

1942

  • Her Cardboard Lover
  • We Were Dancing

1940

  • Escape
  • Cavalcade of the Academy Awards

1939

  • Femmes
  • Idiot's Delight

1938

  • Marie Antoinette

1936

  • Roméo et Juliette

1934

  • The Barretts of Wimpole Street
  • Riptide

1933

  • Going Hollywood

1932

  • Strange Interlude
  • Smilin' Through

1931

  • The Christmas Party
  • Private Lives
  • Ames libres
  • The Stolen Jools
  • Strangers May Kiss

1930

  • Let Us Be Gay
  • La Divorcée

1929

  • Their Own Desire
  • Hollywood chante et danse
  • The Last of Mrs. Cheyney
  • The Trial Of Mary Dugan

1928

  • A Lady Of Chance
  • The Actress
  • The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg

1927

  • After Midnight

1926

  • Upstage
  • The Waning Sex
  • The Devil's Circus

1925

  • His Secretary
  • The Tower of Lies
  • Pretty Ladies
  • 1925 Studio Tour
  • Lady of the Night

1924

  • Larmes de clown
  • Broadway After Dark
  • The Wolf Man
  • The Trail of the Law

1923

  • Lucretia Lombard
  • A Clouded Name

1922

  • The Bootleggers

1920

  • A travers l'orage
  • The Flapper
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Edith Norma Shearer (August 10, 1902 – June 12, 1983) was a Canadian-American actress. Shearer was one of the most popular actresses in North America from the mid-1920s through the 1930s. Her early films cast her as the girl-next-door but for most of the Pre-Code film era beginning with the 1930 film The Divorcee, for which she won an Oscar for Best Actress, she played sexually liberated women in sophisticated contemporary comedies. Later she appeared in historical and period films. Unlike many of her MGM contemporaries, Shearer's fame declined steeply after retirement. By the time of her death in 1983, she was largely remembered at best for her "noble" roles in The Women, Marie Antoinette, and Romeo and Juliet. Shearer's legacy began to be re-evaluated in the 1990s with the publication of two biographies and the TCM and VHS release of her films, many of them unseen since the implementation of the Production Code some sixty years before. Focus shifted to her pre-Code "divorcee" persona, and Shearer was rediscovered as "the exemplar of sophisticated [1930's] woman-hood... exploring love and sex with an honesty that would be considered frank by modern standards". Simultaneously, Shearer's ten-year collaboration with portrait photographer George Hurrell and her lasting contribution to fashion through the designs of Adrian were also recognized. Shearer is widely celebrated by some as one of cinema's feminist pioneers: "the first American film actress to make it chic and acceptable to be single and not a virgin on screen". In March 2008, two of her most famous pre-code films, The Divorcee and A Free Soul, were released on DVD. Description above from the Wikipedia article Norma Shearer, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.





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