
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
The name ANNE REVERE may not ring a bell to many today, but during the 1940s, the Broadway-trained, Tony-winning actress, who was a descendant of Revolutionary War hero Paul Revere, was one of the most revered character actresses in Hollywood. She won the Best Supporting Actress Oscar in 1944 for National Velvet and left an indelible mark on the landscape of film as Gregory Peck’s sympathetic mother in Gentleman’s Agreement in 1947. Learn about her life, career, and the shameful witch hunt of an obsessed Wisconsin Senator looking to make a name for himself that ended her brilliant Hollywood career.
_________________________________________
Sources:
The Film Encyclopedia (1994), By Ephraim Katz;
Leonard Maltin’s Movie Encyclopedia (1994), by Leonard Maltin;
The Hollywood Motion Picture Blacklist: Seventy-Five Years Later (2022), by Larry Ceplair;
Un-American Hollywood: Politics and Film in the Blacklist Era (2007), by Peter Stanfield, et. al;
Tender Comrades: A Backstory of the Hollywood Black List (2012), by Patrick McGilligan and Paul Buhle;
“Anne Revere Begins Again” by Robert Fray, After Dark magazine, December 1970;
“Anne Revere Bio,” Spartacus Educational, by John Simon;
“Horse Sense: What I Learned About Bring A Mother From ‘National Velvet’s’ Arminty Brown,” by Dana Stevens, Slate.com, April 11, 2014;
“Anne Revere, 87, Actress, Dies; Was Movie Mother of Many Stars,” by Peter B. Flint, The New York Times, December 19, 1990;
imdb.com;
_____________________________________________
http://www.airwavemedia.com
Please contact [email protected] if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
4.9
209209 ratings
The name ANNE REVERE may not ring a bell to many today, but during the 1940s, the Broadway-trained, Tony-winning actress, who was a descendant of Revolutionary War hero Paul Revere, was one of the most revered character actresses in Hollywood. She won the Best Supporting Actress Oscar in 1944 for National Velvet and left an indelible mark on the landscape of film as Gregory Peck’s sympathetic mother in Gentleman’s Agreement in 1947. Learn about her life, career, and the shameful witch hunt of an obsessed Wisconsin Senator looking to make a name for himself that ended her brilliant Hollywood career.
_________________________________________
Sources:
The Film Encyclopedia (1994), By Ephraim Katz;
Leonard Maltin’s Movie Encyclopedia (1994), by Leonard Maltin;
The Hollywood Motion Picture Blacklist: Seventy-Five Years Later (2022), by Larry Ceplair;
Un-American Hollywood: Politics and Film in the Blacklist Era (2007), by Peter Stanfield, et. al;
Tender Comrades: A Backstory of the Hollywood Black List (2012), by Patrick McGilligan and Paul Buhle;
“Anne Revere Begins Again” by Robert Fray, After Dark magazine, December 1970;
“Anne Revere Bio,” Spartacus Educational, by John Simon;
“Horse Sense: What I Learned About Bring A Mother From ‘National Velvet’s’ Arminty Brown,” by Dana Stevens, Slate.com, April 11, 2014;
“Anne Revere, 87, Actress, Dies; Was Movie Mother of Many Stars,” by Peter B. Flint, The New York Times, December 19, 1990;
imdb.com;
_____________________________________________
http://www.airwavemedia.com
Please contact [email protected] if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
164 Listeners
1,786 Listeners
1,118 Listeners
13,993 Listeners
1,548 Listeners
951 Listeners
1,287 Listeners
2,791 Listeners
672 Listeners
540 Listeners
492 Listeners
841 Listeners
2,865 Listeners
554 Listeners
222 Listeners
424 Listeners
333 Listeners
115 Listeners
949 Listeners
4,827 Listeners
655 Listeners
1,443 Listeners
2,404 Listeners
3,900 Listeners
549 Listeners
735 Listeners
34 Listeners
574 Listeners
148 Listeners
45 Listeners
51 Listeners
826 Listeners
11 Listeners