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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Joyce_HaberJoyce Haber - Wikipedia

    Joyce Haber (1931–1993) was an American gossip columnist who worked for the Los Angeles Times. Haber was one of Hollywood's last powerful gossip columnists who "were capable of canonizing a film or destroying a star". She took over the old job of Hedda Hopper. Haber left the Times in 1976 to write a roman a clef titled The Users.

  2. Aug 1, 1993 · Joyce Haber, known for her barbed commentaries as one of the last of Hollywood's powerful gossip columnists and the author of a best-selling book on the movie industry, died on Thursday at a...

  3. www.imdb.com › name › nm0352185Joyce Haber - IMDb

    Joyce Haber was born on 28 December 1930 in New York City, New York, USA. She was an actress and writer, known for Conquest of the Planet of the Apes (1972), That Girl (1966) and The Christian Licorice Store (1971). She was married to Douglas S. Cramer. She died on 29 July 1993 in Los Angeles, California, USA.

    • Actress, Writer
    • December 28, 1930
    • Joyce Haber
    • July 29, 1993
  4. Jul 31, 1993 · Joyce Haber, among the very last of the feisty breed of Hollywood columnists who were capable of canonizing a film or destroying a star, has died. Paula Correia, a spokeswoman for Cedars-Sinai...

  5. www.wikiwand.com › en › Joyce_HaberJoyce Haber - Wikiwand

    Joyce Haber (1931–1993) was an American gossip columnist who worked for the Los Angeles Times. Haber was one of Hollywood's last powerful gossip columnists who "were capable of canonizing a film or destroying a star". She took over the old job of Hedda Hopper.

  6. Aug 1, 1993 · Joyce Haber was a famous and influential gossip columnist who succeeded Hedda Hopper in The Los Angeles Times. She also wrote a best-selling book on the movie industry, \"The Users\", and died in 1993 of kidney and liver failure.

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  8. Nov 26, 2018 · The article, unbylined but written by staff writer and future Los Angeles Times gossip columnist Joyce Haber, was ostensibly about the public reception of Lolita. Haber opened with an account of Nabokov at a Putnam’s-sponsored reception for the novel, where he, according to Haber, “faced a formidable force of 1,000 literature-loving women.”

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