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- A resolute, blue-eyed brunette with attractive, slightly pinched features, Geraldine Brooks was born to a Dutch couple on October 29, 1925, in New York City. Her parents had a theater-based background -- father, James Stroock, owned a top costume company and mother, Bianca, was a costume designer and stylist. In dance shoes from age 2, her closer relatives were also extensively involved in theater -- one aunt being a former Ziegfeld Follies girl and another a contralto with the Metropolitan Opera. Growing up surrounding by these theatrical types, it was only natural that it rubbed off on her. She attended the Hunter Modeling School as a young teen and graduated from Julia Richman High School in 1942 as president of her drama club. Older sister, Gloria Stroock, also became an actress, primarily on TV.
In New York, Geraldine studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Art and the Neighborhood Playhouse before apprenticing in summer stock productions. In a pre-Broadway tryout of "Follow the Girls" in 1944, Geraldine subsequently went with the show to Broadway in May of that same year and enjoyed a nine-month run. Following her role as "Perdita" in "A Winter's Tale" at the Theatre Guild, she was signed by Warner Bros. and made her film debut promisingly as a second femme lead in the mystery thriller Cry Wolf (1947) starring Barbara Stanwyck and Errol Flynn. At this time, she shunned her odd-sounding last name of "Stroock" in favor of the more euphonious marquee name of "Brooks", which was the name of her father's costume company. Playing Flynn's cool, conniving niece who gives trouble to Stanwyck, she gave added suspense to the film. In her second movie, Possessed (1947), she is again at odds with another powerhouse star, this time Joan Crawford, but shows more sensitivity against the manic Crawford character in this film-noir chiller.
Geraldine moved to dramatic lead status with Embraceable You (1948) opposite Dane Clark, and played daughter to real wife-and-husband team Fredric March and Florence Eldridge in An Act of Murder (1948), a drama that dealt with the topic of euthanasia. Less impressive was the standard Warner Bros. "B" western The Younger Brothers (1949) and her MGM loanout appearance in Challenge to Lassie (1949). Floundering a bit at this time and failing to strike a star-making chord with audiences, she attempted a few continental film assignments, one in which she played Anna Magnani's younger sister, but grew quickly disillusioned there as well and returned to America.
Focusing instead on stage and TV, including a Broadway stint in "Time of the Cuckoo" starring Tony-winning Shirley Booth, Geraldine eventually went back to studying acting again. In 1956, she became a member of the Actor's Studio and became a strong exponent of its method style. Despite this renewed, enlightening acting technique, her film career found no momentum at all. In fact, she appeared in only two films in the oncoming years as brittle, harder-core ladies in Street of Sinners (1957) and Johnny Tiger (1966). Her greater notices were to be found guesting on various popular TV series. Particularly noteworthy were her roles on Perry Mason (1957), The Defenders (1961), Bus Stop (1961) (for which she earned an Emmy nomination), the pilot of Ironside (1967) and the last final climactic episode of The Fugitive (1963). A regular as Dan Dailey's secretary on the mildly received Faraday and Company (1973), she also appeared in the 70s episodes of Kung Fu (1972), Cannon (1971), Barnaby Jones (1973) and McMillan & Wife (1971), the last in which sister, Gloria Stroock, had a recurring role as Rock Hudson's secretary.
Geraldine's later theater included her Tony-nominated role in "Brightower" (1970) (despite it closing after only one performance) on Broadway and as wife "Golde" in the musical "Fiddler on the Roof". Her final movie part came in the rather ho-hum crime movie Mr. Ricco (1975) alongside Dean Martin. A short-lived series regular as the matriarch of The Dumplings (1976), a rare comedic venture for her, and a stage production of Jules Feiffer's "Hold Me!" in 1977 capped her capable but somewhat unsatisfying career. She deserved much better attention than she got, especially in films. Divorced from TV writer Herbert Sargent after only three years (1958-1961), she married author Budd Schulberg (best known for his screenplay of On the Waterfront (1954)), in 1964. The couple moved to Los Angeles and opened a writers' workshop together for the underprivileged. She also collaborated with Schulberg on the book Swan Watch (1975), a study on the elegant birds in which she also took photographs. In addition, she wrote poetry for children although she herself never had any. Sadly, Geraldine died in 1977 at age 51 of a heart attack while battling cancer, thus depriving the entertainment industry of a valuable talent. She was survived by her husband, mother and sister. - Director
- Writer
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
At the time when women directors make more and more their presence felt on the French scene, the importance of Jacqueline Audry cannot be overstated. All today's daring Metteuses En Scene are certainly her psychic daughters as they are Agnès Varda's. Audry, born in 1908, began to direct long before Varda, as contemporary of Ida Lupino in America. Audry's movies mostly dealt with female psychology from every angle. Her first effort was a subversive adaptation of La Comtesse De Ségur's "Les Malheurs De Sophie" (1946), the young heroine refused the aristocratic happiness and eventually took a rebel stand. "Gigi" (1948) (remade by Vincente Minnelli as a musical) and "Minne" (1950), both from Colette's novels, featured Danielle Delorme. But it was the overlooked "Olivia" (1951) which revealed Audry's remarkable talent: in a boarding-school for girls, two female teachers vied with each other for their students love; using literary works to enhance her story, helped by Edwige Feuillère's masterful performance, this Audry's tour De force about lesbianism was far ahead of its time. "Huis clos" (1954) from Sartre was her second great achievement: the beginning (the elevator) might have inspired Alan Parker for "Angel Heart", using flashbacks to avoid filmed stage production style, Audry's directing is dazzling, with an excellent cast featuring glorious Arletty as lesbian Inès. 'La Garçonne", a remake of a thirties movie which surpassed its model, introduced a woman who would want to live like a man, it contained scenes which, at the time, were more scandalous than what Roger Vadim was doing with Brigitte Bardot. Sadly, another remake, "L'Ecole Des Cocottes" (1958) ,could not hold a candle to the thirties version featuring Raimu. Her last worthwhile effort was "Le Secret Du Chevalier D'Eon" (1960), the fictionalized story of Louis The Fifteenth's spy who used to dress up as a woman: this film and "La Garçonne" featured Andrée Debar, whose androgynous looks worked wonders. A road movie ("Les Petits Matins",1961) and other indifferent movies in the sixties and Audry's career closed in 1971. She died in 1977, and she had unfairly sunk into oblivion. She was married to screenwriter Pierre Laroche who would work with her.- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
- Production Manager
- Producer
George R. Batcheller Jr. was born on 9 January 1911 in Ohio, USA. George R. was an assistant director and production manager, known for It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World (1963), Blonde Comet (1941) and South of Panama (1941). George R. died on 19 June 1977 in Los Angeles, California, USA.- Mack Pearson was born on 12 October 1901 in New York City, New York, USA. He was an actor, known for The Red Buttons Show (1952) and The Joey Bishop Show (1961). He died on 19 June 1977 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
- Carin Lundquist was born on 11 September 1910 in Sundbyberg, Stockholms län, Sweden. She was an actress, known for Linje sex (1958). She died on 19 June 1977 in Stockholm, Stockholms län, Sweden.
- George Howe was born on 19 April 1898 in Bristol, Rhode Island, USA. He was a writer, known for Decision Before Dawn (1951). He was married to Elizabeth Wolcott Parker. He died on 19 June 1977 in Salem, Virginia, USA.