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  1. Sometimes I'm very nice. Sometimes I just speak without thinking. - Dorothy Shaw: I get the picture. You're half sweet and half acid.”. “I always say a kiss on the hand might feel very good, but a diamond tiara lasts forever .”. “Dorothy, please, a lady never admits her feet hurt.”. “- Lady Beekman: It's a tiara.

  2. Gentlemen Prefer Blondes is a 1953 American musical comedy film directed by Howard Hawks and written by Charles Lederer. The film is based on the 1949 stage musical of the same name, which in turn is based on the 1925 novel of the same name by Anita Loos. The film stars Jane Russell and Marilyn Monroe, with Charles Coburn, Elliott Reid, Tommy ...

    • $2.3 million
  3. www.robertfuller.info › movies › musicalsMusicals - Robert Fuller

    Robert’s first musical premiered in March of 1953, I Love Melvin starred Debbie Reynolds and Donald O’Connor. One routine features Robert as a cheerleader; in another a football player who, along with several others, carries Debbie Reynolds, costumed as a football, off the field in victory. In August of 1953, Robert appeared in two major ...

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  5. Spread. "GentleMentleMen" became a popular video among YouTube Poop creators in the late 2000s, and soon, many began following its style. On October 3rd, 2009, YouTube user Slixor uploaded a video combining SpongeBob SquarePants clips with the meme (shown below, left). The video gained over 250,000 views (shown below, left).

  6. Gentlemen Prefer Blondes: Directed by Howard Hawks. With Jane Russell, Marilyn Monroe, Charles Coburn, Elliott Reid. Showgirls Lorelei Lee and Dorothy Shaw travel to Paris, pursued by a private detective hired by the suspicious father of Lorelei's fiancé, as well as a rich, enamored old man and many other doting admirers.

    • (43K)
    • Howard Hawks
    • Approved
    • 3 min
  7. Mar 7, 2024 · Actress and Hollywood chronicler Louise Brooks loved the book, writing “I think Gentlemen Prefer Blondes is a work of art, as good in its way as Jane Austen ’s Pride and Prejudice.”. It became a culture-defining work of the Jazz Age, and was adapted as a play in 1926. Transformed into a Broadway musical in 1949, it made a star of its ...

  8. Jun 1, 2013 · Marilyn Monroe on the set of 1953's Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. Ed Clark—Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images Caption from LIFE. "Marilyn [as] the latest in long line of diamond-grabbers."