Lilli Palmer
(Actor)
.. Senora Fourneau
Born:
May 24, 1914
Died:
January 27, 1986
Trivia:
Born Lillie Peiser, she was a graceful, sophisticated Prussian-born star. The daughter of an actress, she made her stage debut in Berlin in 1932, but soon moved to Paris in the wake of the Nazi takeover (she was Jewish); after appearing there in a Moulin Rouge operetta, she went to London and began appearing in British films in 1935. In 1943 she married actor Rex Harrison (they divorced in 1957), and two years later the two of them moved to the U.S.; for several years she appeared in Hollywood movies and Broadway plays. After returning to Europe she began appearing in international films. In 1957 she married actor Carlos Thompson. She authored an autobiography, Change Lobsters and Dance (1975), and novels including The Red Raven (1978).
Cristina Galbó
(Actor)
.. Teresa
Mary Maude
(Actor)
.. Irene
Tomas Bianco
(Actor)
.. Pedro Baldie
Maribel Martín
(Actor)
.. Isabel
Pauline Challenor
(Actor)
.. Catalina
Teresa Hurtado
(Actor)
.. Andrea
Conchita Paredes
(Actor)
.. Susana
Víctor Israel
(Actor)
.. Brechard
María José Valero
(Actor)
.. Elena
Ana Maria Pol
(Actor)
.. Claudia
Blanca Sendino
(Actor)
.. Cook
Paloma Pages
(Actor)
.. Margarita
Maria del Carmen Duque
(Actor)
.. Julia
Cándida Losada
(Actor)
.. Mademoiselle Desprez
Tomás Blanco
(Actor)
.. Monsieur Baldie
Pauline Challoner
(Actor)
.. Catherine
John Moulder-Brown
(Actor)
.. Luis
Born:
June 03, 1953
Trivia:
British actor John Moulder-Brown made an impressive, wide-eyed film debut as a child in 1958's A Cry From the Streets -- an appearance made even more impressive by studio publicity, which shaved several years off his age. Moulder Brown matured into one of the more intriguing juvenile performers of the '60s, often cast in roles calling for boiling intensity. By 1972, however, he was just another actor in just another horror film, Vampire Circus, while in 1973 he seemed lost amidst the decor and glittering star cast of Visconti's 4-hour Ludwig (1973). John Moulder Brown worked in films of lessening quality as the '70s and '80s progressed. He popped up in 1987 in the solid, substantial role of the Prince in Amy Irving's filmization of Rumpelstiltskin.