fbpx
Wikipedia

Geraldine Brooks (actress)

Geraldine Brooks (born Geraldine Stroock; October 29, 1925[citation needed] – June 19, 1977) was an American actress whose three-decade career on stage as well as in films and on television was noted with nominations for an Emmy in 1962 and a Tony in 1970. She was married to author Budd Schulberg.

Geraldine Brooks
Brooks in 1955
Born
Geraldine Stroock

(1925-10-29)October 29, 1925
New York City, U.S.
DiedJune 19, 1977(1977-06-19) (aged 51)
Riverhead, New York, U.S.
Years active1947–1976
Spouses
(m. 1958; div. 1961)
(m. 1964)
RelativesGloria Stroock (sister)

Early life

Brooks was born Geraldine Stroock in New York City to a family descended from Dutch immigrants. Her parents had connections in the entertainment industry, with father James the owner-manager of a theatrical costume company and her mother Bianca a stylist and costume designer. Two of her aunts had also been in show business, one as a singer at the Metropolitan Opera and another as a showgirl with the Ziegfeld Follies. Her elder sister, Gloria, is an actor. Geraldine, who was named after Metropolitan Opera's most famous diva of the era, Geraldine Farrar, took dancing classes from the age of two and attended the all-girls Hunter Modeling School and graduated in 1942 from Julia Richman High School, where she was president of the drama club.

Career

Debut

The World War II years of 1942–45 found Geraldine Stroock refining her craft at such traditional venues as the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, the Neighborhood Playhouse and summer stock. Her first Broadway show, Follow the Girls, a musical comedy, opened at the New Century Theatre on April 8, 1944, and ran for 888 performances, closing over two years later, on May 18, 1946. The young actor, who was 18 when she was cast in this tuneful spoof of life in the theatre, played a character tellingly named "Catherine Pepburn". She did not stay with the production for its entire run, but was subsequently cast in another Broadway show, The Winter's Tale. This Theatre Guild production of the Shakespeare romance opened at the Cort Theatre on January 15, 1946, and closed after 39 performances on February 16. Playing the female lead, Perdita, the now-20-year-old actor was noticed by a Warner Bros. representative and signed to a contract.

Warner Bros. contract player and freelance

Unlike her elder sister, Gloria Stroock, who has a long career as an actor in mostly small film and television roles under her real name, young Geraldine decided at this point to take the surname of "Brooks" professionally. That name was also the name of her father's costume company. Her debut under the new stage name was also her first time in front of the cameras, as the studio's suspense drama, Cry Wolf, went into national release on August 19, 1947, although it was seen and reviewed in New York one month earlier. Billed third after top-tier stars Errol Flynn and Barbara Stanwyck she received mostly good notices, while the film itself encountered critical resistance, with The New York Times critic Bosley Crowther complaining that "[t]he final explanation of the mystery is ridiculous and banal."[1] Her second film at the studio, Possessed, was released three weeks before Cry Wolf, on July 26, and was, again, reviewed in New York earlier, on May 30. This time, she was in fourth place, behind top-tier stars Joan Crawford and Van Heflin and third-billed Raymond Massey. A much more vulnerable persona than the poised, imperturbable one she played in Cry Wolf, she had a number of heavy dramatic confrontations with the overwrought character played by Joan Crawford (who received an Oscar nomination for the role) and became a lifelong friend of the eighteen-years-older star, and spoke at her memorial service in May 1977, five weeks before her own death. Seeing the young actor for the first time in the latter film, Bosley Crowther described her as "a newcomer who burns brightly ... as Miss Crawford's sensitive step-daughter".[2]

In her third film, Warners allowed its new contract player to rise to the level of a co-star. Embraceable You, released in July 1948, had her second-billed to Dane Clark, who played a goodhearted, although criminally inclined, tough guy who falls in love with the victim of the hit-and-run car accident for which he was responsible. There was no happy ending for the two doomed protagonists, and the film, structured as a second feature, was little-noticed and went unreviewed in The New York Times. After one more film, The Younger Brothers, a color Western not released until May 1949, in which she was, again, in fourth place, following Wayne Morris, Janis Paige and Bruce Bennett, Brooks asked for, and received, a release from her studio contract in July 1948, after two years and four films.

Now a freelancer, she had a strong fourth-billed (following Fredric March, Edmond O'Brien and Florence Eldridge) dramatic role in Universal Pictures' An Act of Murder, playing the daughter of March and Eldridge, who were married in real life, and the anguish that the husband, a judge, endures when he contemplates ending the life of his terminally ill wife. It was released in December 1948, but the downbeat film, although receiving positive notices, was not a financial success.

For The Reckless Moment (1949), directed by Max Ophuls, she was third-billed behind James Mason and Joan Bennett. Brooks, aged 24, was cast as Bennett's 17-year-old daughter, whose reckless affair with a seedy, older art dealer puts her mother on a collision course with a blackmailer with worse to come. The Columbia film was released in December 1949, a year after her previous screen appearance in An Act of Murder. Her final American film of the 1940s, Challenge to Lassie was made in Technicolor at MGM. Released two months earlier, in October, but not seen in New York until April 1950, the production gave her third billing, behind Edmund Gwenn and Donald Crisp who, in this version of the classic story, Greyfriars Bobby, were once again typecast as elderly Scotsmen. Playing the cemetery caretaker's daughter, she had the only female role of any importance, and was also given a couple of good dramatic scenes, but the focus was still firmly on the canine star.[3]

Her later film appearances were few but included roles in Johnny Tiger (1966) starring Robert Taylor, and Mr. Ricco (1975), opposite Dean Martin.

Foreign films

In mid-1949, with no immediate movie or stage prospects, Geraldine Brooks accepted an offer from Italian production and distribution companies, Itala Film and Artisti Associati, for roles in two projects to be filmed on location, co-starring top native-born romantic leading men, Rossano Brazzi and Vittorio Gassman. Similar in tone, both are doom-laden melodramas depicting the tragic price women paid for descending into prostitution in the midst of the hunger, deprivation, and moral corruption prevailing in postwar Italy. The first (released in the United States three years later as Streets of Sorrow) gave her, for the only time, top billing, as a prostitute making her living in the streets, who desperately and tragically attempts to prevent the handsome magistrate, played by Vittorio Gassman, who falls in love with her, from learning of her profession. Three years later, with the film finally receiving a shortened and censored U.S. release, A. H. Weiler noted in his November 1952 New York Times review that "Geraldine Brooks, an expatriate American who has emoted in more than one Italian film, gallantly tries to make a wistful and convincing heroine of Maria, the prostitute grasping desperately for a chance at decency". He described the film, however, as "a sad and limp romance, which is trite, slightly lachrymose and largely unedifying". [4]

The second title, Vulcano (later released in the U.S. as Volcano), had an Oscar-nominated (for 1937's The Life of Emile Zola) director, William Dieterle, and two top Italian stars, Anna Magnani and Rossano Brazzi, who were billed above her. The adventurous shoot was primarily confined to the land and sea area around the eponymous volcanic isle of Vulcano as well as Lipari, off the coast of Mediterranean's largest island, Sicily. Upon returning to Hollywood in October 1949, Dieterle told The New York Times that "[C]onditions for shooting a picture could hardly have been more primitive. Except for the mechanical equipment we took with us, we had to construct everything we needed with our own hands."[5] The film restores Brooks to her familiar role of an innocent ingenue taken advantage of by an unscrupulous exploiter of women, played by Brazzi, while her older sister, played by Anna Magnani, returns to the island of their birth, burned out after having worked for 18 years as a prostitute in Naples. As in the case of Streets of Sorrow, this production was also censored and released in the United States years after filming. In its June 1953 review, Time magazine noted that although it is "[R]eminiscent in story and treatment of Stromboli, Volcano is a far better film. Against the island's rough backdrop, the yarn's primitive passions do not seem particularly excessive or out of place".[6]

1950s, 1960s, and 1970s television

 
Guest starring on The Virginian, 1962

In 1952, she co-starred in the film noir The Green Glove with Glenn Ford. Brooks and Ford had a torrid affair during the production of the film on location in Paris.[7]

She was again on Broadway in The Time of the Cuckoo in 1952, and in 1970 she was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading actor in a Play for Brightower, which closed after its opening night performance. Brooks appeared mostly on television after 1950.

She appeared in many of the anthology series popular early in the decade, such as Orient Express,[8] Armstrong Circle Theatre, Appointment with Adventure (two episodes), Lux Video Theatre, and Studio One.

Brooks guest starred on Richard Diamond, Private Detective, and The Fugitive, both starring David Janssen. Her other credits included Johnny Staccato, Have Gun - Will Travel, Adventures in Paradise, Perry Mason, Ironside, The Defenders, Dr. Kildare, Stoney Burke, Mr. Novak, Ben Casey, Get Smart, Gunsmoke (in the 1966 episode "Killer at Large"), The Outer Limits, Combat! (in the episode "The Walking Wounded"),[citation needed] Bonanza, It Takes A Thief, Daniel Boone and Kung Fu (in the episode "Nine Lives"). She played the role of Arden Dellacorte in 1971 on the CBS daytime soap opera Love of Life and starred as the overweight owner of a delicatessen opposite James Coco in the short-lived 1976 situation comedy The Dumplings, her final role. Geraldine Brooks also appeared in Barnaby Jones, playing a character named Janet Enright in the 1973 episode "The Murdering Class".

She was nominated for the 1962 Emmy Award for Outstanding Single Performance by an actor in a Leading Role for her appearance in the episode, "Call Back Yesterday", with fellow guest costar David Hedison in the drama series Bus Stop.

Personal life

Brooks married screenwriter and producer Herb Sargent in 1958; the couple was divorced in 1961. She married screenwriter, producer, and writer Budd Schulberg in 1964.[citation needed]

She died of a heart attack in 1977 while undergoing treatment for cancer at Central Suffolk Hospital in Riverhead, New York. She was 51 years old[citation needed] but her New York Times obituary listed her age as 52.[9] Her interment was in Mount Sinai, New York's cemetery, Washington Memorial Park.[citation needed]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1947 Possessed Carol Graham
1947 Cry Wolf Julie Demarest
1948 Embraceable You Marie Willens
1948 An Act of Murder Ellie Cooke
1949 The Younger Brothers Mary Hathaway
1949 The Reckless Moment Beatrice 'Bea' Harper
1949 Challenge to Lassie Susan Brown
1950 Ho sognato il paradiso
(English title: Streets of Sorrow)
Maria
1950 Volcano Maria, Maddalena's sister
1952 The Green Glove Christine 'Chris' Kenneth
1957 Street of Sinners Terry
1961–1966 Bonanza Elizabeth Stoddard Cartwright / Carol Attley 2 episodes
1962 Perry Mason Miriam Waters Season 5 Episode 29
1963 The Outer Limits Yvette Leighton Episode: "The Architects of Fear"
1963 The Virginian Georgia Price Episode: "Duel at Shiloh"
1963 Combat! Nurse Lt. Ann Hunter Episode: "The Walking Wounded"
1964 The Outer Limits Ann Barton Episode: "Cold Hands, Warm Heart"
1966 Johnny Tiger Dr. Leslie Frost
1966 Gunsmoke Esther Harris Episode: "Killer at Large"
1967 The High Chaparral Fay Leyton Episode: "The Price of Revenge"
1973 Kung Fu Widdaw Tackaberry Episode: "Nine Lives"
1975 Mr. Ricco Katherine Fremont

Awards and nominations

  • 1962 Emmy Award nomination: Outstanding Single Performance by an actor in a Leading Role – Geraldine Brooks, Bus Stop, ABC[10]
  • 1970 Tony Award nomination: actor (Play) – Geraldine Brooks, Brightower[11]

References

  1. ^ Crowther, Bosley (July 19, 1947). "'Cry Wolf,' a Warner Mystery Offering Flynn, Stanwyck and Geraldine Brooks, at Strand". The New York Times.
  2. ^ Crowther, Bosley (May 30, 1947). "'Possessed', Psychological Film With Joan Crawford as the Star, Opens at Hollywood". The New York Times.
  3. ^ Crowther, Bosley (April 7, 1950). "The Screen: Two New Films on Local Scene". The New York Times.
  4. ^ Weiler, A. H. (November 18, 1952). "'Italian-Made Drama, Streets of Sorrow' With Geraldine Brooks, Opens at World". The New York Times.
  5. ^ Spiro, J. D. (October 30, 1949). "HOLLYWOOD DIGEST; 'The River' Set for Filming in India – Dieterle on 'Volcano' – Other Items". The New York Times.
  6. ^ . Time. June 15, 1953. Archived from the original on December 22, 2008.
  7. ^ Ford, Peter (2011). Glenn Ford: A Life (Wisconsin Film Studies). Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 116–118. ISBN 978-0-29928-154-0.
  8. ^ "The Billboard Magazine – TV Film Reviews". October 10, 1953. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  9. ^ Hess, John L. (June 21, 1977). "Geraldine Brooks, actor, 52, Starred on Stage, Screen and TV". The New York Times.
  10. ^ Academy of Television Arts & Sciences: Emmy Awards database
  11. ^ BroadwayWorld.com: Geraldine Brooks Tony Awards Info

External links

geraldine, brooks, actress, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, geraldine, brooks, actress, news, newspa. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Geraldine Brooks actress news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Geraldine Brooks born Geraldine Stroock October 29 1925 citation needed June 19 1977 was an American actress whose three decade career on stage as well as in films and on television was noted with nominations for an Emmy in 1962 and a Tony in 1970 She was married to author Budd Schulberg Geraldine BrooksBrooks in 1955BornGeraldine Stroock 1925 10 29 October 29 1925New York City U S DiedJune 19 1977 1977 06 19 aged 51 Riverhead New York U S Years active1947 1976SpousesHerb Sargent m 1958 div 1961 wbr Budd Schulberg m 1964 wbr RelativesGloria Stroock sister Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Debut 2 2 Warner Bros contract player and freelance 2 3 Foreign films 2 4 1950s 1960s and 1970s television 3 Personal life 4 Filmography 5 Awards and nominations 6 References 7 External linksEarly life EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Brooks was born Geraldine Stroock in New York City to a family descended from Dutch immigrants Her parents had connections in the entertainment industry with father James the owner manager of a theatrical costume company and her mother Bianca a stylist and costume designer Two of her aunts had also been in show business one as a singer at the Metropolitan Opera and another as a showgirl with the Ziegfeld Follies Her elder sister Gloria is an actor Geraldine who was named after Metropolitan Opera s most famous diva of the era Geraldine Farrar took dancing classes from the age of two and attended the all girls Hunter Modeling School and graduated in 1942 from Julia Richman High School where she was president of the drama club Career EditDebut Edit The World War II years of 1942 45 found Geraldine Stroock refining her craft at such traditional venues as the American Academy of Dramatic Arts the Neighborhood Playhouse and summer stock Her first Broadway show Follow the Girls a musical comedy opened at the New Century Theatre on April 8 1944 and ran for 888 performances closing over two years later on May 18 1946 The young actor who was 18 when she was cast in this tuneful spoof of life in the theatre played a character tellingly named Catherine Pepburn She did not stay with the production for its entire run but was subsequently cast in another Broadway show The Winter s Tale This Theatre Guild production of the Shakespeare romance opened at the Cort Theatre on January 15 1946 and closed after 39 performances on February 16 Playing the female lead Perdita the now 20 year old actor was noticed by a Warner Bros representative and signed to a contract Warner Bros contract player and freelance Edit Unlike her elder sister Gloria Stroock who has a long career as an actor in mostly small film and television roles under her real name young Geraldine decided at this point to take the surname of Brooks professionally That name was also the name of her father s costume company Her debut under the new stage name was also her first time in front of the cameras as the studio s suspense drama Cry Wolf went into national release on August 19 1947 although it was seen and reviewed in New York one month earlier Billed third after top tier stars Errol Flynn and Barbara Stanwyck she received mostly good notices while the film itself encountered critical resistance with The New York Times critic Bosley Crowther complaining that t he final explanation of the mystery is ridiculous and banal 1 Her second film at the studio Possessed was released three weeks before Cry Wolf on July 26 and was again reviewed in New York earlier on May 30 This time she was in fourth place behind top tier stars Joan Crawford and Van Heflin and third billed Raymond Massey A much more vulnerable persona than the poised imperturbable one she played in Cry Wolf she had a number of heavy dramatic confrontations with the overwrought character played by Joan Crawford who received an Oscar nomination for the role and became a lifelong friend of the eighteen years older star and spoke at her memorial service in May 1977 five weeks before her own death Seeing the young actor for the first time in the latter film Bosley Crowther described her as a newcomer who burns brightly as Miss Crawford s sensitive step daughter 2 In her third film Warners allowed its new contract player to rise to the level of a co star Embraceable You released in July 1948 had her second billed to Dane Clark who played a goodhearted although criminally inclined tough guy who falls in love with the victim of the hit and run car accident for which he was responsible There was no happy ending for the two doomed protagonists and the film structured as a second feature was little noticed and went unreviewed in The New York Times After one more film The Younger Brothers a color Western not released until May 1949 in which she was again in fourth place following Wayne Morris Janis Paige and Bruce Bennett Brooks asked for and received a release from her studio contract in July 1948 after two years and four films Now a freelancer she had a strong fourth billed following Fredric March Edmond O Brien and Florence Eldridge dramatic role in Universal Pictures An Act of Murder playing the daughter of March and Eldridge who were married in real life and the anguish that the husband a judge endures when he contemplates ending the life of his terminally ill wife It was released in December 1948 but the downbeat film although receiving positive notices was not a financial success For The Reckless Moment 1949 directed by Max Ophuls she was third billed behind James Mason and Joan Bennett Brooks aged 24 was cast as Bennett s 17 year old daughter whose reckless affair with a seedy older art dealer puts her mother on a collision course with a blackmailer with worse to come The Columbia film was released in December 1949 a year after her previous screen appearance in An Act of Murder Her final American film of the 1940s Challenge to Lassie was made in Technicolor at MGM Released two months earlier in October but not seen in New York until April 1950 the production gave her third billing behind Edmund Gwenn and Donald Crisp who in this version of the classic story Greyfriars Bobby were once again typecast as elderly Scotsmen Playing the cemetery caretaker s daughter she had the only female role of any importance and was also given a couple of good dramatic scenes but the focus was still firmly on the canine star 3 Her later film appearances were few but included roles in Johnny Tiger 1966 starring Robert Taylor and Mr Ricco 1975 opposite Dean Martin Foreign films Edit In mid 1949 with no immediate movie or stage prospects Geraldine Brooks accepted an offer from Italian production and distribution companies Itala Film and Artisti Associati for roles in two projects to be filmed on location co starring top native born romantic leading men Rossano Brazzi and Vittorio Gassman Similar in tone both are doom laden melodramas depicting the tragic price women paid for descending into prostitution in the midst of the hunger deprivation and moral corruption prevailing in postwar Italy The first released in the United States three years later as Streets of Sorrow gave her for the only time top billing as a prostitute making her living in the streets who desperately and tragically attempts to prevent the handsome magistrate played by Vittorio Gassman who falls in love with her from learning of her profession Three years later with the film finally receiving a shortened and censored U S release A H Weiler noted in his November 1952 New York Times review that Geraldine Brooks an expatriate American who has emoted in more than one Italian film gallantly tries to make a wistful and convincing heroine of Maria the prostitute grasping desperately for a chance at decency He described the film however as a sad and limp romance which is trite slightly lachrymose and largely unedifying 4 The second title Vulcano later released in the U S as Volcano had an Oscar nominated for 1937 s The Life of Emile Zola director William Dieterle and two top Italian stars Anna Magnani and Rossano Brazzi who were billed above her The adventurous shoot was primarily confined to the land and sea area around the eponymous volcanic isle of Vulcano as well as Lipari off the coast of Mediterranean s largest island Sicily Upon returning to Hollywood in October 1949 Dieterle told The New York Times that C onditions for shooting a picture could hardly have been more primitive Except for the mechanical equipment we took with us we had to construct everything we needed with our own hands 5 The film restores Brooks to her familiar role of an innocent ingenue taken advantage of by an unscrupulous exploiter of women played by Brazzi while her older sister played by Anna Magnani returns to the island of their birth burned out after having worked for 18 years as a prostitute in Naples As in the case of Streets of Sorrow this production was also censored and released in the United States years after filming In its June 1953 review Time magazine noted that although it is R eminiscent in story and treatment of Stromboli Volcano is a far better film Against the island s rough backdrop the yarn s primitive passions do not seem particularly excessive or out of place 6 1950s 1960s and 1970s television Edit Guest starring on The Virginian 1962 In 1952 she co starred in the film noir The Green Glove with Glenn Ford Brooks and Ford had a torrid affair during the production of the film on location in Paris 7 She was again on Broadway in The Time of the Cuckoo in 1952 and in 1970 she was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading actor in a Play for Brightower which closed after its opening night performance Brooks appeared mostly on television after 1950 She appeared in many of the anthology series popular early in the decade such as Orient Express 8 Armstrong Circle Theatre Appointment with Adventure two episodes Lux Video Theatre and Studio One Brooks guest starred on Richard Diamond Private Detective and The Fugitive both starring David Janssen Her other credits included Johnny Staccato Have Gun Will Travel Adventures in Paradise Perry Mason Ironside The Defenders Dr Kildare Stoney Burke Mr Novak Ben Casey Get Smart Gunsmoke in the 1966 episode Killer at Large The Outer Limits Combat in the episode The Walking Wounded citation needed Bonanza It Takes A Thief Daniel Boone and Kung Fu in the episode Nine Lives She played the role of Arden Dellacorte in 1971 on the CBS daytime soap opera Love of Life and starred as the overweight owner of a delicatessen opposite James Coco in the short lived 1976 situation comedy The Dumplings her final role Geraldine Brooks also appeared in Barnaby Jones playing a character named Janet Enright in the 1973 episode The Murdering Class She was nominated for the 1962 Emmy Award for Outstanding Single Performance by an actor in a Leading Role for her appearance in the episode Call Back Yesterday with fellow guest costar David Hedison in the drama series Bus Stop Personal life EditBrooks married screenwriter and producer Herb Sargent in 1958 the couple was divorced in 1961 She married screenwriter producer and writer Budd Schulberg in 1964 citation needed She died of a heart attack in 1977 while undergoing treatment for cancer at Central Suffolk Hospital in Riverhead New York She was 51 years old citation needed but her New York Times obituary listed her age as 52 9 Her interment was in Mount Sinai New York s cemetery Washington Memorial Park citation needed Filmography EditYear Title Role Notes1947 Possessed Carol Graham1947 Cry Wolf Julie Demarest1948 Embraceable You Marie Willens1948 An Act of Murder Ellie Cooke1949 The Younger Brothers Mary Hathaway1949 The Reckless Moment Beatrice Bea Harper1949 Challenge to Lassie Susan Brown1950 Ho sognato il paradiso English title Streets of Sorrow Maria1950 Volcano Maria Maddalena s sister1952 The Green Glove Christine Chris Kenneth1957 Street of Sinners Terry1961 1966 Bonanza Elizabeth Stoddard Cartwright Carol Attley 2 episodes1962 Perry Mason Miriam Waters Season 5 Episode 291963 The Outer Limits Yvette Leighton Episode The Architects of Fear 1963 The Virginian Georgia Price Episode Duel at Shiloh 1963 Combat Nurse Lt Ann Hunter Episode The Walking Wounded 1964 The Outer Limits Ann Barton Episode Cold Hands Warm Heart 1966 Johnny Tiger Dr Leslie Frost1966 Gunsmoke Esther Harris Episode Killer at Large 1967 The High Chaparral Fay Leyton Episode The Price of Revenge 1973 Kung Fu Widdaw Tackaberry Episode Nine Lives 1975 Mr Ricco Katherine FremontAwards and nominations Edit1962 Emmy Award nomination Outstanding Single Performance by an actor in a Leading Role Geraldine Brooks Bus Stop ABC 10 1970 Tony Award nomination actor Play Geraldine Brooks Brightower 11 References Edit Crowther Bosley July 19 1947 Cry Wolf a Warner Mystery Offering Flynn Stanwyck and Geraldine Brooks at Strand The New York Times Crowther Bosley May 30 1947 Possessed Psychological Film With Joan Crawford as the Star Opens at Hollywood The New York Times Crowther Bosley April 7 1950 The Screen Two New Films on Local Scene The New York Times Weiler A H November 18 1952 Italian Made Drama Streets of Sorrow With Geraldine Brooks Opens at World The New York Times Spiro J D October 30 1949 HOLLYWOOD DIGEST The River Set for Filming in India Dieterle on Volcano Other Items The New York Times The New Pictures Time June 15 1953 Archived from the original on December 22 2008 Ford Peter 2011 Glenn Ford A Life Wisconsin Film Studies Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Press pp 116 118 ISBN 978 0 29928 154 0 The Billboard Magazine TV Film Reviews October 10 1953 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Hess John L June 21 1977 Geraldine Brooks actor 52 Starred on Stage Screen and TV The New York Times Academy of Television Arts amp Sciences Emmy Awards database BroadwayWorld com Geraldine Brooks Tony Awards InfoExternal links Edit Biography portal New York City portal New York state portal Los Angeles portal Theatre portal Film portal Television portalGeraldine Brooks at IMDb Geraldine Brooks at the Internet Broadway Database Geraldine Brooks at the Internet Broadway Database Geraldine Brooks at the Internet Off Broadway Database Geraldine Brooks at the University of Wisconsin s Actors Studio audio collection Geraldine Brooks at AllMovie Geraldine Brooks at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Geraldine Brooks actress amp oldid 1138046937, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.