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Moss Hart (October 24, 1904 – December 20, 1961) was an American playwright, librettist, and theater director. Early years. Hart was born in New York City, the son of Lillian (Solomon) and Barnett Hart, a cigar maker. [ 1][ 2] He had a younger brother, Bernard. [ 3] .
May 30, 2012 · By Meryl Gordon. May 30, 2012. Kitty Carlisle Hart decorated her sprawling Park Avenue duplex with a half-century of theatrical mementos, including posters featuring the prolific output of her...
- Meryl Gordon
On August 10, 1946, she married playwright and theatrical producer Moss Hart, whom she met at the Bucks County Playhouse in New Hope, Pennsylvania. [10] [11] They had two children. Hart died on December 20, 1961, at their home in Palm Springs, California. [12]
May 4, 2001 · Moss Hart blitzed Depression-era Broadway with smash-hit comedies, capturing a 1937 Pulitzer Prize for You Can’t Take It With You.
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Moss Hart. Writer: You Can't Take It with You. Tony Award-winning American playwright/lyricist Moss Hart was born Oct. 24, 1904, in New York City to a poor Jewish family and raised in what he described as a "drab tenement" on 107th St. in the Bronx. He was educated in the city public school system.
May 13, 2001 · At the time of his death, in 1961, Moss Hart was one of Broadway's benevolent mandarins—admired, ubiquitous, well liked, and known far beyond Times Square, thanks to his movie scripts and...