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Maggie McNamara

Maggie McNamara (June 18, 1928 - February 18, 1978) was an American actress. Born in New York City, she began her acting career on the stage. She starred in the national company of The Moon Is Blue for eighteen months, before debuting on Broadway in The King of Friday's Men. She went to Hollywood when Otto Preminger cast her in the lead of his film version of The Moon is Blue, and she garnered a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress.

McNamara's second film role was in Three Coins in the Fountain, but she only made two more films. At the time of her death from an overdose of sleeping pills, she was supporting herself as a typist.

In the early 1960s, She starred in an episode of The Twilight Zone, The Ring-a-Ding Girl.


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In the early 1960s, She starred in an episode of The Twilight Zone, The Ring-a-Ding Girl. Her contribution to the film industry has been recognized through a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. At the time of her death from an overdose of sleeping pills, she was supporting herself as a typist. Alla Nazimova died in 1945 in Los Angeles and was interred in Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California. McNamara's second film role was in Three Coins in the Fountain, but she only made two more films. With little choice, she gave up on the film industry, returning to perform on Broadway until the early 1940s when she appeared in a few more films, ostensibly in need of money. Born in New York City, she began her acting career on the stage. She starred in the national company of The Moon Is Blue for eighteen months, before debuting on Broadway in The King of Friday's Men. She went to Hollywood when Otto Preminger cast her in the lead of his film version of The Moon is Blue, and she garnered a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress. By 1925 she no longer could afford to invest in more films and financial backers withdrew their support.

Maggie McNamara (June 18, 1928 - February 18, 1978) was an American actress. However, her creativity did not meet consumer tastes and the films lost a great deal of money. Daring for the times, in her adaptations of works by such notable playwrights as Oscar Wilde or Henrik Ibsen she instituted her own ideas for filmmaking. In 1918, at age 39, Nazimova felt confident enough in her abilities that she began producing and writing films in which she also starred. Loyal Davis, Nazimova was made godmother to their daughter, former first lady Nancy Davis-Reagan.

A friend of Edith Luckett and her husband, Dr. Her studio squelched the stories surfacing about her bisexual lifestyle and to cover it up, for more than a dozen years she lived in a partnership of mutual convenience with the homosexual actor Charles Bryant. She became widely gossiped about for the outlandish and allegedly debauched parties in her large mansion on Sunset Boulevard known as the Garden of Allah. Over the next few years she made a number of highly successful films that earned her a considerable amount of money.

She toured Europe as well the United States where her first Broadway performances in 1906 drew critical acclaim. Deciding to make the USA her home, she worked on stage until she made her silent film debut in 1916. Under the stage name, Alla Nazimova, her career blossomed and she married a fellow actor but it did not last long. As a teenager she began to pursue an interest in the theatre and took acting lessons before joining a theater company in Moscow. Her emotional distress caused her to rebel against authority as a way to gain attention but nonetheless, she was a talented child who was playing the violin by age seven.

She grew up in a very dysfunctional family and was shuffled between foster homes and relatives. Born Mariam Edez Adelaida Leventon, into a Jewish family in Yalta in the Crimea which at the time was a part of Russia but today is an autonomous region of Ukraine. Alla Nazimova, born May 22, 1879 - died July 13, 1945, was a Ukrainian born stage and film actress, scriptwriter, and producer.