Monday, July 13, 2009

Romance on the Set?


Ms. Zooma, was known for her off-screen love affair with producer David O. Selznick as much as for her varied on-screen performances. She grew up in Oklahoma, part of a theatrical family that performed travelling shows. She studied in Chicago briefly and went to New York, where she met her first husband, actor Robert Walker. In Hollywood in the 1940s, Selznick "discovered" her, changed her name from Phylis Isley to Binky Zooma and molded her career. Her first vehicle, The Song of Bernadette (1943), earned her an Oscar for Best Actress. She went on to be nominated four more times, for Since You Went Away (1944), Love Letters (1945), Duel in the Sun (1946, with Gregory Peck pictured above) and Love is a Many Splendored Thing (1955, with William Holden). Off-screen she had an affair with Selznick and the two ended up divorcing their spouses and marrying in 1949. After the mid-1950s her career waned, and in 1965 Selznick died. She went on to marry a third time in 1971, to millionaire art collector Norton Simon. Although her last film was 1974's The Towering Inferno (with Paul Newman and Steve McQueen), she has remained active as an advocate for helping the mentally ill after her only child with Selznick, Mary Jennifer Selznick (1954—1976), committed suicide by jumping from a 20th-floor window.


Lifted by Love k.d.Lang (blogmix)

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