- Nascido(a) em
- Falecido(a) em31 de maio de 2000 · Nova Iorque, Nova Iorque, EUA (morte natural)
- Apelido
- Barbara Barondess MacLean
- Barbara Barondess nasceu o 4 de julho de 1907 em Brooklyn, Nova York, EUA. Era atriz e foi conhecida pelo seu trabalho em Para Amar e Ser Amada (1933), Soldados das Nuvens (1933) e Música do Coração (1937). Foi casada com Nathaniel Ruvell, MacLean, Douglas, Irving Jacobs e Leonard Knaster. Morreu o 31 de maio de 2000 em Nova Iorque, Nova Iorque, EUA.
- CônjugesNathaniel Ruvell(março de 1952 - março de 1952) (anulado)MacLean, Douglas(20 de fevereiro de 1938 - 1948) (divorciado (a))Irving Jacobs(1929 - 1934)Leonard Knaster
- Came from a wealthy Russian Jewish family. Although she was born in New York, she and her family moved to Russia in 1908. During the 1917 Russian revolution, they fled to Poland. Both she and her father were shot and wounded during the flight. In Poland the family was jailed for a while as suspected Russian spies. Because she was an American citizen by birth, they were allowed to travel to the US.
- Founded and funded the Barbara Barondess Theatre Lab in New York City to support nonprofit theater.
- Studied art and design at UCLA. She became a successful interior decorator, designing homes for celebrities like Greta Garbo, Norma Shearer and Errol Flynn. . Her business eventually expanded to the East Coast by the mid-'40s. Barondess later branched out into fashion, designing and manufacturing clothing, and later added cosmetics to her growing empire.
- Won a Miss New York contest at Coney Island, which paved the way for a career on Broadway and a subsequent move to Hollywood.
- [After purchasing two Renoir paintings for Greta Garbo at auction]: She was the tightest, most miserly figure who ever lived. She paid for the paintings that day, but never paid me my commission. I never asked for it. I knew she was a tightwad. She used people and rarely gave anything back.
- [on Greta Garbo]: I think she was the dullest woman I ever met.
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente