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This Harvard-educated, piano-playing actor with a remarkably broad range had by this time made some forty-four motion pictures. |
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A rugged leading man for more than four decades, whom Deborah Kerr said was a hundred times greater as an actor than he himself believed. |
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Being publicized as "The Look" early on, she soon proved to be much more than that--having "cinema personality to burn," to quote James Agee. |
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A movie hero with boyish looks whose strong ideas and ideals led into producing, directing, and the establishment of the Sundance Institute. |
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The slave girl in "Quo Vadis" in 1949 went on to impress in a succession of roles (who can forget "Two Women"?) in more than 80 films in Italy and Hollywood. |
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The handsome Scotsman began acting in films and on British TV in 1954. After being James Bond, he went on creating strong men in scores of films. |
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Erupting on the screen in "The Graduate" (1967), he has not stopped acting with body, soul and heart since. |
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A Renaissance woman who acts (comedy and drama), dances, sings, and writes about her spiritual wanderings, always ready to go out on a limb. |
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A living legend who doesn't think of himself as such, an enduring superstar simply because he is a terrific actor. |
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Singer, actress, film director, producer, writer, and composer whose popularity has endured and grown for nearly four decades. |