Female-driven films were still very new when one stand out changed the way we understood how women's stories were told.
There was never a feud,” said the Oscar winner years after ‘What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?’, “because it takes two to tango ...
Female-driven films were still very new when one stand out changed the way we understood how women's stories were told.
Ruth Elizabeth Davis (she got the "Bette" from the Balzac novel "Cousin Bette") of Lowell, Massachusetts, arrived in Hollywood in 1930 to instant non-acclaim. She became known for the series of tense, ...
"Of Human Bondage" (1934): After churning out 22 films in her first three years in Hollywood, Davis finally got her big break in this adaptation of the celebrated Somerset Maugham novel. She sizzled ...
*Refers to the latest 2 years of stltoday.com stories. Cancel anytime. Stacker honors legendary actress Bette Davis with a list of 25 incredible facts from her life that you may not know. Born Ruth ...
The Oscar-winning director explained that the actress refused to call him by his first name and only by "Mr. Howard" Howard directed Davis, then 72, in the 1980 NBC TV movie, which served as the third ...