Wednesday 10 July 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Biography
Source (Google.com.pk)

It would be hard for the present day generation to appreciate just how big a Hollywood star Madeleine Carroll was in her day.Madeleine Carroll was born Edith Madeleine Carroll in No. 32, Herbert St, West Bromwich, Staffordshire, England on February 26, 1906, the elder of two children of my uncle, an Irish professor of languages and his French wife.In 1907, the numbering of the houses was changed so the house is now No. 44, Herbert St, which I visited for the first time in September 2005.Her sister Marguerite (Guigette) was born 18 months later, in August 1907.In 1912 the family moved to No. 7 Jesson Street, where Madeleine spent most of her childhood – a far cry from the glamorous world of Hollywood that she was later to encounter. Her own life was focused very much around the family home, influenced very much by her mother, Helene, who taught her French, as well as many of the social graces which would be of huge significance in furthering her movie career later on.Her early years were uneventful with many days spent dreaming about a future where she could provide her mother in particular with the things she hadn’t got then.
She had many happy memories of spending many holidays in Co Limerick, Ireland, where her father was born in 1875.“Family group taken on visit to Kilduff, Co Limerick. Madeleine is seated on the ground at bottom left, in front of her mother, whilst her sister Gigette is seated on the bottom right of the photo”
With her father’s tutorship, she matriculated from Birmingham University at the early age of 15, and by midsummer 1926, she was armed with her B.A degree, ready to teach or to go to the Sorbonne in Paris, where he father had studied before her.1926 -1945.Madeleine proved a very bright student, and had been enrolled at the University of Birmingham with the intention of fulfilling her father’s choice of her profession as a teacher of French. “Everything indicated that I would spend the rest of my days teaching, ” she said years later. “I was shy, nervous … all through college. My father had set his heart on my getting an M.A. and all would have gone well if I had not joined a drama society in my senior year. In March 1926, and then a student in French, I got a leading part in the annual play called “Selma”, and somehow I did it as if I had been acting all my life. I understood then how people get ‘a call’.”
Sir Barry Jackson, director of The Birmingham Repertory Theatre, saw her in “Selma” and offered her a contract which she declined on the insistence of her father, who vehemently disapproved of her theatrical ambitions. Receiving her B.A. in French with honours, she went to Paris for graduate study but returned almost immediately, determined to pursue a career in the theatre. Her father ordered her out of the house (they were reconciled only after her first film) and to support herself she acquired a job as French instructor at a girls’ school in Hove (near Brighton). Three months, in between unsuccessful acting job hunting, was all she could tolerate there, so she switched to tutoring privately in Birmingham.
1927
After saving sufficient funds to travel to London, she continued pavement pounding there until early in 1927 when she was given a small part in the tour of a play by Cyril Campion called “The Lash”. She joined the production at the New Brighton in February 1927 and after its short run was out of work again until Sir Seymour Hicks signed her to a five year contract with his noted touring company. Despite the unexpected brevity of the association, it enabled her to acquire some of the rudiments of acting technique, chiefly through the coaching of Hicks.
1928
There are several versions, with minor variations, of her entrance into movies. The most persistent indicates that she was released from her contract with Hicks to accept a part in a London play during the rehearsals of which she was screen tested and eventually selected for the feminine lead in a picture called “The Guns of Loos” (1928), which had it’s debut in Brighton.

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013

Young Beautiful Actresses Hot Pictures Photos Images Pics Designs 2013


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