LYCOS RETRIEVER
Greer Garson
built 116 days ago
Mrs. Miniver (Greer Garson) is a kind and elegant women of England. Her primary concerns are caring for her family and convincing her husband (Walter Pidgeon) that her extravagant new hat is worth the price she paid for it. Then her son Vincent (Richard Ney) comes home from school, only to catch the eye of wealthy Carol Beldon (Teresa Wright). The town's biggest concern is a pending flower show where legacy winner Lady Beldon (Dame May Whitty) is threatened by Mr. Ballard's (Henry Travers) "Mrs. Miniver" rose. All of their happy plans come to a halt, though, when the country goes to war and homes are replaced with bomb shelters and families are torn apart to do their duty for the cause.
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Synopsis: Greer Garson's first non-MGM starring vehicle was the stylish western Strange Lady in Town. That lady is Julia (Garson), who arrives in 1880 New Mexico to set up practice as a doctor. The townsfolk are not only resistant to the notion of a lady sawbones, but they become downright hostile whenRead More
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Irish-born actress Greer Garson graduated with honors from the University of London and finished her post-grad work at the University of Grenoble in France. For many years, she worked efficiently as supervisor of an advertising firm, spending her spare time working in community theater. By age 24, Garson decided to take a risk and try a full-time acting career. She was accepted by the Birmingham Repertory, making her first stage appearance as an American Jewish tenement girl in Street Scene. Her London debut came in 1934 in The Tempest, after which she headlined several stage plays and musicals. While vacationing in London, MGM mogul Louis B. Mayer happened to see Garson in Old Music; entranced by her elegant manner and flaming red hair, Mayer signed the actress to an MGM contract, showcasing her in the Anglo-American film production Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939).
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On July 15, 1949, Greer Garson married Dallas oilman-rancher-lawyer, Colonel E. E. "Buddy" Fogelson, who had been in charge of oil procurement for the Allied war effort in Europe during World War II. For several years, the Fogelsons divided their time between Los Angeles, Dallas, and their historic Forked Lighting Ranch in Pecos, New Mexico. Mrs. Fogelson (as she preferred to be known) became enthralled with the Southwest in general and Forked Lightning in particular, as she involved herself with her husband's interest in raising Santa Gertrudis cattle and in the life of the community. Forked Lightning served as an expression of the Fogelsons' interest in environmental and wildlife protection and historic preservation. The ranch is now a U.S. national wildlife refuge and the Fogelsons ... donated funds and ranch property to the Department of the Interior to ensure the protection of Spanish and ancient Indian ruins (since designated a National Historic Monument).
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Greer Garson was born on Sept. 29, 1903, in County Down, Northern Ireland, of Presbyterian parents. Her father, George Garson, a businessman, died soon after, and she and her mother, Nina, moved to London. The name Greer was a contraction of MacGregor, her mother's ancestral name.
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Greer Garson was born in County Down in Northern Ireland on September 29, 1904. Her childhood was a normal if not non-descript life. Greer showed no early signs of interest in becoming an actress.
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