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Rose Hobart

Trivia

Rose Hobart

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  • Hobart believed she was blacklisted because she was a board member of the Actors Lab and was appearing at the same time in a controversial play about miscegenation, "Deep Are the Roots". However, Lee J. Cobb reportedly named her before the HUAC (House Un-American Affairs Committee) as a member of the Communist Party, which resulted in her blacklisting.
  • Edited "Haven News", the journal of the Motion Picture Country Home.
  • In 1994, she published an autobiography, "A Steady Digression to a Fixed Point".
  • Her father was first cellist for the New York Symphony and first violinist for the Metropolitan.
  • When artist Joseph Cornell re-cut Ourang (1931) into an avant-garde silent short, he re-titled it Rose Hobart (1936) after the female lead.
  • Appeared in a student film, "Rancho California", in 1988.
  • Hobart had already appeared in a stage version of "Liliom", starring Joseph Schildkraut and Eva Le Gallienne, before making her screen debut in the 1930 film version.
  • Upon her death at age 94, Hobart was survived by her only child, Judson Bosworth (born 1949).
  • Made her stage debut on the Chauutauqua circuit in the late 1910s.
  • Interviewed in Tom Weaver's book "Attack of the Monster Movie Makers" (McFarland & Co., 1994).

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