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Tuesday, March 1

Screen legend Jane Russell dead at 89 1 Maret 2011

The bomb '50s the 1940s and the movie, whose name is synonymous with voluptuousness, died Monday morning at his home in Santa Maria, California, his family said. Jane Russell 89.
Daughter-in-law Etta Waterfield said that Russell was a "pillar of health" but caught a bad cold and died of respiratory difficulties.
Russell's son, Thomas K. Waterfield, Tracy Foundas and Robert "Buck" Waterfield, "was at her side, Etta Waterfield said.
Eccentric philanthropist and film producer Howard Hughes was the first person to put Jane Russell on the silver screen, signing to a seven-year contract in 1940 and immediately put on his production of "The Outlaw," a movie about the torrid romance between Billy and a woman named Rio Kid (Russell).
This film only had a limited release - in 1943 - because the sensor when it is nervous about the attention given to the figure of Russell. Hughes is not satisfied. He pulled the film from release and kept out of circulation for six years while he's more reshoots and re-editing.
And, Hughes continued to Russell from the screen - just look the other for seven years was in "Young Widow" (1946), was shot when he was loaned out to United Artists. Jane Russell dies at 89 RELATED TOPICS

    
* Jane Russell
    
* Hollywood
    
* Howard Hughes
wide publicity Hughes' campaign for "The Outlaw," but - he has said that he has he makes appearances five days a week for five years - Russell made popular during World War II as a pin-up, and when the film was finally released in the year 1946, he was a star.
While Russell Hughes fetishized body in other films after the initial contract negotiations ended and the two others, actress quietly making a name for himself as a talented actress capable of high drama or light comedy. He emerged as Calamity Jane with Bob Hope in "The Paleface" (1948) - another loan-out - and a sequel, "Son of Paleface," in 1952 - earning an Oscar nomination for the song "Am I in Love?"
Robert Mitchum's co-star twice - ". Macao" in 1951's "His Kind Woman" and 1952's He shared the screen with Frank Sinatra and Groucho Marx in 1951's "Double Dynamite," and with Victor Mature, Vincent Price and Hoagy Carmichael in "The Las Vegas Story" (1952).
But that was 1953's "Gentlemen prefer Blondes" with Marilyn Monroe who was shot Russell into the stratosphere. He was praised for singing and acting comedy, and just two years later made her last film for Hughes.
Russell had some success as a singer in the 1940s, came up with Kay Kayser Orchestra, and in 1954 he and Beryl Davis, Connie Haines and Della Russell (later replaced by Rhonda Fleming) began recording religious-themed music and touring as The Girls Four .
Russell and her first husband, high school sweetheart Bob Waterfield - an All-American quarterback for UCLA and the Pro Football Hall of Farmer, who plays for the Cleveland Rams and the Los Angeles Rams - formed a production company in 1955, produced three films starring Russell. But after "The Fuzzy Pink nightgown" flopped in 1957, Russell took a break from films and concentrate on his music career.
When he returned to film, however, he can not re-prominent, ended her screen career with a series of Western in 1960 and 1970 detective movie "Darker than Amber."
While it may have been a concern to find Russell who kept away from superstardom, that number brought fame Madison Avenue in the 1970's when he appeared in television commercials for Playtex Cross Heart Bra "for us gals, full of thought."
Russell has the appearance of several stages in 1970 and wrote an autobiography, "Jane Russell: My Path and Transfer of Me," in 1985, revealed that his marriage to Waterfield ended in 1968 because of fighting with adultery and alcohol.
Born in Minnesota to the Army lieutenant and a former actress, Jane Russell's interest in drama but it was originally planned to become a designer. He took music lessons and acted in the stage production of high school, but when his father died early, Russell went to work as a receptionist doctor - and do some modeling on the side - to help support the family.
At 19, Russell had an abortion, failed back-alley which resulted in its inability to conceive children. He and Waterfield, whom he married in 1943, adopted three, and he devoted much of the rest of his life campaigning for adoption and foster child.
Russell married twice again, with actor Roger Barrett in 1968 and businessman John Calvin Peoples in 1974. Her marriage to Barrett lasted but three months before he died of a heart attack. He and Communities together until his death in 1999.
Throughout his career, Russell was a conservative who is considered loyal Democrats in Hollywood "crazy."
"In my days of Hollywood are Republicans," he once said. "All the studio heads are Republicans, and we fought Communism you have. John Wayne and Charlton Heston and myself and Bob Mitchum, and President Ronald Reagan came right out of the same group."
He was a vocal supporter of the Iraq war from the beginning in 2003, vocal opponent of abortion, even in cases of rape or incest, a tireless fighter for the "get the Bible back in school." Clinton administration hates and is a fan of former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and conservative commentator Ann Coulter.
And in 2003, he described himself as "an absolute, mean-spirited, right wing, fanatical narrow-minded, conservative Christian," variations of which he often used.

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