Gone With The Wind

Es wurden insgesamt 341 Einträge zu 'Gone With The Wind' gefunden (Stand: 05.02.2012).

Sehen Sie sich die aktuell angebotenen Bücher zu 'Gone With The Wind' an.

Rense, Paige (editor). Architectural Digest 4/92 ACADEMY AWARDS COLLECTOR'S EDITION Greta Garbo Cover. New York: Architectural Digest Publications, 1992.

Architectural Digest April 1992. This magazine, in illustrated wrappers, is in FINE condiion. 300 pages. Vol 49 No 4. ACADEMY AWARDS COLLECTOR'S EDITION!. Includes: "William Wellman in Hollywood: Flying High with the Director of Academy' First Best Picture" by A. Scott Berg; "Dressing Rooms of the Stars: Vintage Studio Bungalows Tailored to Film Personas" by Marc Wanamaker. Includes photos of Clark Gable and Joan Crawford, Gloria Swanson's bungalow, Carole Lombard, Greta Garbo's dressing room, Mary Pickford's bunglaow, Rudolph Valentino, Marie Dressler, Will Roger's bungalow, Marion Davies; "Robert Usher: Imaging Movies: Visual Genius of Paramount's Innovative Art Director" by Michael Webb. Photos include Mae West; "George Hurrell's Hollywood Glamour: The Photographer's Glittering Visions of Stars at Home" by Irene Borger. Photos include Ramon Novarro, Loretta Young, Wallace Beery, Myrna Loy, Jean Harlow, Jane Russell, Joan Crawford; "Maurice Chevalier: Suave Star of Gigi in His Spanish-Style House" by Anne Edwards; "Stars In Residence includes photos of Sir John Gielgud, Audrey Hepburn, Lillian Hellman, Antony Quinn, Katherine DeMille, Mervyn LeRoy, Grace Kelly, Ronald Colman, Paul Muni, John Garfield, Basil Rathbone, Billie Burke, Sir John Mills, Adolph Zukor, Van Heflin, Sophia Loren, James Dean, Ralph Bellamy, Luise Rainer, Susan Hayward, Jess Barker; "D.W. Griffith: The Father of American Film in Beverly Hills" by Richard Schickel; "Great Garbo: The Legendary Star's Secret Garden in New York" by Gray Horan; "Cedric Gibbons and Dolores Del Rio: The Art Director and the Star of Flying Down to Rio in Santa Monica" by Brendan Gill. Photography by George Hurrell and Clarence Sinclair Bull; "Jack L. Warner: The Beverly Hills Estate of the Archetypal Hollywood Mogul" by Charles Lockwood, interior design by William Haines, architecture by Roland E. Coate, landscape architecture by Florence Yoch; "Vivien Leigh and Laurence Olivier: Gone With the Wind and Wuthering Heights Stars in England" by Anne Edwards. Notley Abbey, interior design by Sibyl Colefax and John Fowler; "Judy Garland: The Wizard of Oz Star in Bel-Air" by Gerald Clarke, interior design by Mabel Cooper; "Leslie Howard: Star of Intermezzo and Gone With the Wind in Beverly Hills" by Brendan Gill; "Lana Turner: Best Actress Nominee for Peyton Place at Home in Brentwood" by Michael Frank; "Preston Sturges: Writer and Director of Sullivan's Travel and The Miracle of Morgan's Creek in the Hollywood Hills" by Donald Spoto; "Janet Gaynor and Adrian: Nominee for A Star is Born and Her Costume Designer Husband" by Gavin Lambert, architect Burton A. Schutt; "Garson Kanin and Ruth Gordon: The Turtle Bay House of the Writers of Adam's Rib and Pat and Mike" by Garson Kanin; "Jennifer Jones and David O. Selznick: The Song of Bernadette Star and Producer of Gone With the Wind at Tower Grove" by Anne Edwards; "Greer Garson: Mrs. Miniver's Best Actress with Husband Richard Ney in Bel-Air" by A. Scott Berg; "Robert Montgomery: Debonair Leading Man and Two-Time Nominee in Beverly Hills" by Brendan Gill; "Paulette Goddard: Star of Modern Times and Kitty in Coldwater Canyon" by Gavin Lambert, interior design Harold Grieve; "David Niven: Separate Tables' Best Actor in the Pink House" by A. Scott Berg; "Joan Fontaine: Suspicions' Best Actress on Rodeo Drive" by Brendan Gill; "Gene Kelly: Star of An American in Paris on Alta Drive" by Michael Frank; "Rosalind Russell: Auntie Mame at Home in Beverly Hills" by Michael Frank; "Hal Wallis: The Producer's Valley Farm" by Anne Edwards; "Olivia de Havilland: The Beverly Hills House of the Best Actress in To Each His Own and The Heiress" by Anne Edwards; "Anatole Litvak: Oceanside Retreat of The Snake Pit's Director" by Richard Schickel, interior design by Harold Grieve, architect Douglas Hannold; "Gene Tierney: Beverly Hills Backdrop of the Enigmatic Star of Laura" by Gavin Lambert; "John Huston: Mercurial Director of The Maltese Falcon and The Dead at St. Clerans" by Lawrence Grobel; "Leland Hayward and Margaret Sullavan: Hollywood's First Super-Agent and Nominee for Three Comrades" by Steven M.L. Aronson, interior design by Harold Grieve; "Henry Fonda: The Bel-Air Residence of On Golden Pond's Best Actor" by Richard Schickel, interior design by Peter Shore; "Ava Gardner: Nominee for Mogambo in London" by Richard Schickel; "Vincent Minnelli, MGM's Visionary Director of Gigi and Lust for Life" by Gerald Clarke, interior design by Val Arnold; "Deborah Kerr: Six-Time Nominee in Pacific Palisades" by Donald Spoto; "William Goetz: Prolific Producer's Holmby Hill Collection" by A. Scott Berg, interior design by William Haines; "Edith Head: The Award-Winning Costume Designer's Hacienda-Style Retreat in Beverly Hills" by Donald Spoto; "Sammy Kahn: Bicoastal Lives of the Master Lyricist" by Michael Frank; "Claire Trevor: A Spacious New York Apartment for Key Largo's Best Supporting Actress" by Steven M. L. Aronson; "Cher: Moonstruck's Best Actress in Malibu" by Lawrence Grobel, interior design by Ron Wilson; "Michael Douglas: The Manhattan Apartment of Wall Street's Best Actor" by Judith Thurman, interior design by Craig Wright; "William Holden: Best Actor in Stalag 17 in His San Fernando Valley House" architecture by Paul Williams, text by Richard Schickel. Paperback condition: Fine in Wraps

[SW: Architecture/Architectural Design]

Details

Mitchell, Margaret. Lost Laysen. New York: Scribners, 1996. ISBN: 0684824280

First edition FIRST EDITION 127 pages with numerous black and white photos. The book is in NEAR FINE condition with remainder mark on bottom pages. The jacket is in NEAR FINE condition with crimping on bottom spine. JMVINTAGE specializes in Books, Magazines and Treasures related to the Duke and Duchess of Windsor and..other curious people. The dust jacket reads:THE WORLD SAW ONLY ONE BOOK BY MARGARET MITCHELL PUBLISHED IN HER LIFETIME, THE INCOMPARABLE Gone With The Wind , the most popular novel in American history. Upon her death in 1949, her personal papers, almost all other writing, and even the original typescript of Gone With The Wind were destroyed. Now, sixty years later, the impossible has happened: The world has another story from Margaret Mitchell. Better still, it's a deligbt, a fitting predecessor to America's most beloved epic novel. A spirited tale of love and honor on a doomed South Pacific island called Laysen, Lost Laysen would be justly praised as a charming effort by a remarkable young talent if it were its author s only work. But it isn t, of course, and Lost Laysen also enchants because of the many fascinating ways it foretells Gone With Wind:: in its two central male characters, one a gentleman and the other more rough-hewn, who vie for the attention of a feisty independent-minded woman, and who will go to any lengths to defend her honor; in its re-creation of a vanished world; and in its unforgettable ending. . Hard Cover condition: Near Fine in Near Fine dj

[SW: Biography/Autobiography]

Details

Rense, Paige (editor)s. Architectural Digest 4/90 ACADEMY AWARDS COLLECTORS EDITION! New York: Conde Nast Pub, Inc, 1990.

Magazine, in illustrated wraps, is in VERY GOOD condition with use wear marks on wrapper, lower front corner and first few of the pages' lower corner are lightly bent with the top front right edge scuffed. 330 pages. Vol 47, No 4. Architectural Digest 4/90 -- Articles include: "Guest Speaker: Karl Malden-President of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences" by Harry Hurt III; "Architects to the Stars: Hollywood Legacies of Wallace Neff, James E. Dolena, Roland E. Coate and Paul Williams" by Michael Webb; "Memoir: Garson Kanin-Tales from the Garden of Allah"; "For Collectors: The Growing Mystique of Antiques from Films" by Hunter Drohojowska; "Architecture: Mack Sennett's Folly-Plans for the Original Hollywood Dream Palace" by Charles Lockwood; "Cedric Gibbons and the MGM Style-Pioneering Art Director Who Brought Modernism to the Movies" by Michael Webb; "Hedda Hopper and Louella Parsons: Private Lives of Hollywood's Powerful Columnists" by Charles Champlin; "Charlie Chaplin: King of the Silent Era at 'Breakaway House" by A. Scott Berg; "Cecil B. DeMille: Hollywood Residence of a Master Showman" by Michael Webb; "Buster Keaton: An Italian Villa for the Great Stone Face" by Richard W. Bann; "Louis B. Mayer-MGM's Archetypal Studio Head at Home" by A. Scott Berg; "King Vidor: Provocative Director of War and Peace" by A. Scott Berg, architecture Wallace Neff; "Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks, Sr-The Fabled House of Hollywood's Royal Couple". Pickfair; "Ernst Lubitsch: Deft Director for Ninotchka and Heaven Can Wait" by Michael Frank, interior design by Harold Grieve; "William Powell: Sophisticated Wit of My Man Godfrey and The Thin Man" by Richard Schickel, architecture by James E. Dolena; "David O. Selznick: Producer of Best Pictures Gone With The Wind and Rebecca" by Rudy Behlmer, architecture by Roland E. Coate; "Harold Lloyd: A Renaissance Palace for One of the Silent Era's Great Comic Pioneers" by Kevin Brownlow. Greenacres; "Gloria Swanson: The Queen of Sunset Boulevard" by Michael Frank; "Irene Dunne: Nominee for the Awful Truth" by Richard Schickel; "Warner Baxter: Bel-Air Mansion of the Enigmatic Best Actor for In Old Arizona" by Richard Schickel; "Stars in Residence: Vivien Leigh, Gene Tierney, Elizabeth Taylor and Michael Wilding, Charles Laughton and Elsa Lanchester, Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, Judy Garland and Sid Luft, Sir Noel Coward, Robert Mitchum, Jean Simmons, Tony Curtis, Richard Harris, David Niven, Steward Granger, Roy Scheider, Ingrid Bergman, Gene Kelly, Ray Milland, James Mason, Greer Garson, Cary Grant, Burt Lancaster, Ava Gardner, James Jimmy Stewart, Orson Welles, Natalie Wood, Henry Fonda, Charles Boyer, Dustin Hoffman, William Holden, John Huston, Walt Disney, Yul Bryner, Anne Baxter, Faye Dunaway, Ginger Rogers, Brian Aherne, Jack Lemmon, Ann Harding, Gregory Peck, Samuel Goldwyn, Burgess Meredith, Janet Gaynor, Wallace Beery, Jean Hersholt, Joan Blondell, Lee Marvin; "Frances Marion: A Mediterranean Villa for the Oscar-winning Writer of The Champ" by A. Scott Berg, architecture by Wallace Neff; "Gary Cooper: Bachelor Living for Best Actor in Sergeant York and High Noon" by A. Scott Berg; "Edward G. Robinson: Sterling Collection for the Star of Little Caesar and Double Indemnity" by Michael Frank; "James Cagney: Yankee Doodle Dandy's Best Actor" by Richard Schickel; "Hal Roach: A Legendary Producer's Beverly Hills Estate" by Richard W. Bann, interior design by Harold Grieve; "Spencer Tracy: Captain Courageous and Boys Town Winner at The Hill" by Anne Edwards; "Katherine Hepburn: Four-Time Best Actress in New York, Connecticut and California; "Arthur Hornblow, Jr and Myrna Loy-The Producer of Gaslight and Star of The Tin Man in Hidden Valley" by A. Scott Berg, architecture by Roland E. Coate; "Marlene Dietrich: The Nominee for Morocco in Black and White" by Michael Frank; "Victor Fleming: Best Director for Gone With the Wind on Balboa" by Richard Schickel, architect Kirtland Cutter; "Merle Oberon: Bel-Air Estate of the Best Actress Nominee for The Dark Angel" by A. Scott Berg; "Melvyn Douglas: A Hilltop House for the Best Supporting Actor in Hud and Being There" by Jeffrey Simpson, architecture by Roland E. Choate; "Barbara Stanwyck and Robert Taylor: Ranch Living and Beverly Hills Glamour for the Stars of Stella Dallas and Ivanhoe" by Richard Schickel; "Norma Shearer and Irving G. Thalberg: The Santa Monica Beach House of a Holywood Genius and His Leading Lady; "Frederic March: Normandy Style for Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde's Best Actor" by Anne Edwards, architecture by Wallace Neff; "Claudette Colbert: Best Actress for It Happened One Night" by Jennifer Allen, architecture by Lloyd Wright; "George Cukor: Sparkling Direct of the Holiday, The Philadelphia Story and My Fair Lady" by A. Scott Berg, architecture by James E. Dolena, interior design by William Haines; "Marlon Brando: Best Actor for On The Waterfront and The Godfather" by Michael Frank; "Alfred Hitchcock: Dark Genius of Rebecca, Notorious and Psycho in Bel-Air" by Donald Spoto; "Lillian Gish" by Peter Carlsen; "John Wayne: Best Actor in True Grit in Newport Beach" by Sam Burchell; "Fred Astaire: Debonair Star of Top Hat and Swing Time" by Michael Frank; "Liza Minnelli: Cabaret's Best Actress At Home in New York" by Peter Carlsen, interior design by Timothy MacDonald; "Bette Davis: Best Actress for Jezebel and Dangerous at Witch Way" by A. Scott Berg; "Gene Hackman: Santa Fe Spaces for The French Connection's Best Actor" by Joan Chatfield-Taylor, architecture by Stephen Samuelson and Harry Daple, interior design by Ken Figueredo and Glynn Gomez; "Kirk Douglas: The Nominee for Champion and Lust for Life in Beverly Hills" by Harry Hurt III, interior design by Michael Morrison AIA; "Irving Ravetch and Harriet Frank, Jr: Best Screenplay Nominees for Hud and Norma Rae in Los Angeles" by Michael Frank; "Clark Gable and Carole Lombard: A California Ranch for the Stars of Gone with the Wind and Nothing Sacred" by Charles Lockwood; "Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall" by Micheal Frank; "Joan Crawford: The Best Actress for Mildred Pierce in Her Polished Brentwood Residence" BY Anne Edwards. JMVINTAGE specializes in Books, Magazines and Treasures related to the Duke and Duchess of Windsor and..other curious people. Paperback condition: Very Good

[SW: Architecture/Architectural Design]

Details

Koss, Jennifer: "Gone with the Wind" Scarlett O Hara in the novel and the film A Comparison, GRIN VERLAG, April 2010, Besorgungstitel - vorauss. Lieferzeit 3-5 Tage. ISBN: 3640601939
1.Introduction to the topicThe following paper tries to introduce one of the most remarkable American novels of the 20th century and its most outstanding character Scarlett O'Hara. Gone with the Wind was written by Margaret Mitchell and was published in 1936. It is a novel that combines the events of the 19th century American Civil War with the story of Scarlett O'Hara, her family, her friends and her foes. It was followed by a film that was released in 1939 and two authorized sequels which were published in 1991 and 2007.Gone with the Wind plays in the Old American South and also reflects a Southern point of view of the events of the Civil War. It begins when Scarlett is 16 years old and ends when she is 28. The paper will try to give an insight to the character of Scarlett and will try to analyze what Scarlett stands for or if she stands for anything more than herself in the novel and the film.

NEUBUCH! 2010. 40 S. 210 mm 210 mm x 148 mm x 3 mm; Akademische Schriftenreihe, Bd. V148935

Details