Danielle


Biography

Filmography

 

Costume-Wardrobe (Feature Film)

Come One, Come All! (1970)
Costumes

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Desperate Journey (1942) -- (Movie Clip) You Yankees Always Win After a bit in which the Resistance in Poland pulls off a sabotage and sends a carrier pigeon to England, we meet Allied members of an RAF bomber crew, Arthur Kennedy, Patrick O’Moore, Ronald Reagan as Johnny, Errol Flynn as Terry, Ronald Sinclair as Hollis, Alan Hale as Edwards, Raoul Walsh directing, in Desperate Journey, 1942.
Chimes At Midnight (1965) -- (Movie Clip) I've Picked His Pocket Writer-director Orson Welles (as Falstaff, in his film based on Shakespeare’s recurring character) introduces Keith Baxter as Prince Hal and Paddy Bedford as cohort Bardolph, Margaret Rutherford the befuddled Hostess Quickly, drawing from Henry IV, Part 1, in Chimes At Midnight, 1965.
Up The Down Staircase (1967) -- (Movie Clip) The Limitless Realm At lunch on the first day at her New York public high school, new teacher Sylvia (Sandy Dennis) with colleagues Ruth White, Eileen Heckart, Patrick Bedford as Barringer, early in Up The Down Staircase, 1967, from director and producer Robert Mulligan and Alan J. Pakula.
Up The Down Staircase (1967) -- (Movie Clip) There's One Every Year After a classroom standoff with delinquent-but-gifted student Joe Ferrone (Jeff Howard), novice Manhattan high school English teacher Sylvia (Sandy Dennis) meets him again in the stairwell, in Up The Down Staircase, 1967, based on the novel by Berlin-born former New York teacher Bel Kaufman.
Smilin' Through (1941) -- (Movie Clip) Drink Only To Me Having met by accident in the abandoned estate of his deceased father, half-American Kenneth Wayne (Gene Raymond) and Kathleen (Jeanette MacDonald) find affinity, with "Drink To Me Only With Thine Eyes," from a Ben Johnson poem, in Frank Borzage's Smilin' Through, 1941.
His Family Tree -- (Movie Clip) A Desolate Space From the opening scene, James Barton, by then a modest Vaudeville legend, as County Kerry pub owner "Patrick Murphy," making good his promise to cross to the pond to find out why his son's letters have stopped arriving, in His Family Tree, 1935.

Bibliography