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Barbara Stanwyck was a true charm. While
most actresses of her era portrayed the dames in the movies,
Stanwyck played the characters that you felt had really
spent time behind the diner counter. Formerly known as Ruby
Stevens, Barbara Stanwyck had both the wit and charm that
made not only the director's swoon, weak-kneed, and completely
fall in love with her, but huge male crowds of the famous
actors like Herman Mankiewicz as well."
She was a cynical delight in screwball
comedies, like "The Lady Eve" (1941). She was
a touching, working-class heroine of melodramas like "Stella
Dallas" (1937), and a cynosure of peroxided bourgeois
evil as the Venus fly trap of "Double Indemnity"
(1944)" -People.
Other essential films are 1940's "Remember
the Night," and 1941's "Ball of Fire." She
knew how to win the audiences heart, and with talent like
hers, there was nowhere for this start to go but up. (CD)
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Barbara (1943)
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