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  1. Jeanne Eagels (born Eugenia Eagles; June 26, 1890 – October 3, 1929) was an American stage and film actress. [1] Eagels appeared in many Broadway productions, and in the emerging medium of sound films. She was posthumously nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress for her 1929 role in The Letter after dying suddenly that year at the ...

  2. Jeanne Eagels: Directed by George Sidney. With Kim Novak, Jeff Chandler, Agnes Moorehead, Charles Drake. The life of 1920s actress Jeanne Eagels.

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    • George Sidney
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    • Kim Novak, Jeff Chandler, Agnes Moorehead
  3. Jeanne Eagels. Actress: The Letter. Jeanne Eagels, one of the most intriguing stars of late silent films and the early talkies, was born Amelia Jean Eagles on June 26, 1890 in Kansas City, Missouri, to Edward and Julia Sullivan Eagles. Young Jean was part of an impoverished family of eight, with three brothers and two sisters. She likely stopped going to school when she was 11 years old. As a ...

    • June 26, 1890
    • October 3, 1929
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  5. Another "remembrance" of Jeanne Eagels achieved nationwide circulation in 1975, in Walter Scott's column in Parade magazine: "Jeanne Eagels, portrayed on the screen in 1957 by Kim Novak, once charged an actor, Glenn Hunter, $3,000 for spending the night with her; but she was no prostitute. She explained that she was merely punishing Hunter for ...

  6. Jeanne Eagels. (film) Jeanne Eagels (also titled The Jeanne Eagels Story) is a 1957 American biographical film loosely based on the life of stage star Jeanne Eagels. Distributed by Columbia Pictures, the film was produced and directed by George Sidney from a screenplay by John Fante, Daniel Fuchs and Sonya Levien, based on a story by Fuchs.

    • George Sidney
  7. Jun 26, 2015 · By 1957, Jeanne Eagels’ name was all but forgotten, and even now only a few of her films are available to watch; most know of the Eagels films remade by Bette Davis (The Letter) and Gloria Swanson (Rain) more than the original star. Where Marilyn and Valentino had easily identifiable traits and story’s, Jeanne is a blank slate.

  8. Harry Cohn, Columbia's querulous studio head, intended Jeanne Eagels to feature Kim Novak in her first solo starring role. Prior to this 1957 biopic about an explosive 1920s stage and screen actress, Novak had costarred in such films as Picnic (1955), The Man with the Golden Arm (1955), and The Eddy Duchin Story (1956) with high-profile male stars whose characters were the center of the action.